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fLIBRAPtY OF CONGRESS. 

$|iwp ^m"5^'^ iy ■ 

5 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. \ 



POEMS 



FAITH, HOPE, A:ND LOVE. 



PHCEBE GARY. 







C-r/A^-TAVA 



— r. 



NEW YORK: 
PUBLISHED BY HURD AND HOUGHTON, 

459 Broome Street. 
1868. 







f S /at7 



Entered according txj Act of Congress, in the year 18G7, by 

Hprd and Houghton, 

in the Clerk's Office of the District Court for the Southern District 

of \e\v York 



37:2. "X J^ 



RIVERSIDE, CAMBRIDGE : 

ITEREOTYPED AND PRINTED BT 

H. 0. HOUGHTON AND COMPANV. 



CONTENTS. 



A MoxKisH Legend 

A Weary Heart 

A Good Day .... 

The Hero of Fort Wagxer 

CoMiXG Home .... 

Many Mansions . 

Hidden Sorrow 

A Woman's Conclusions 

Answered 

Disenchanted 

Winter Flowers . 

Arthur's Wife . 

Alas 



Mother and Son 
Complaint 
True Love . 
Theodora 
Up and Down 
Beyond .... 
Nearer Home 
March Crocuses . 
The Spiritual, Body . 
Favored .... 
Gracie .... 
Poor Margaret 
Earth to Earth 
Women .... 
Lady Marjory . 
The Old Man's Darlln'g 



PAGE 
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4 
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10 

17 

19 

22 

23 

25 

27 

32 

33 

35 

37_ 

39" 

41 

45 

48 

50 

52 

55 

57 

61 

63 

65 

67 

74 



IV 



CONTENTS. 



The Uxhonored 

The Only Okxament . 

John Brown 

Garibaldi in Piedmont 

Doves' Eyes 

Equality 

Homesick 

Ebb-Tide .... 

"Field Preaching" . 

Happy Women 

Hymn 

Gathering Blackberries 
A Tent Scene . 



PAOE 

76 



85 

90 

92 

93 

96 

97 

100 

101 

102 

107 

Loss AND Gain 109 

Drawing Water 112 

Too Late 114 

Lovers and Sweethearts 116 

The Rose 119 

Jennie 120 

Archie 122 

Cowper's Consolation 124 

A Prayer 127 

Memorial 129 

The Hunter's Wife 131 

Retrospect 133 

Human and Divine 134 

The Prize 137 

Tried and True 139 

The Harmless Luxury 141 

A Day Dream . 143 

Over-Payment 145 

Peace 148 



Sunset 
Apology 
Twice Smitten . 
A Woman's Answer 
The Shadow 



150 
152 
154 
156 
158 



CONTENTS. V 

PAGE 

In Absence 159 

Morning and Afternoon . . , . . 161 

Enchantment 163 

Living by Faith 165 

My Lady 168 

Border-Land 170 

Passing Feet 172 

Our Homestead ....... 174 

The Lady Jaqueline 176 

Love's Recompense 179 

Vain Repentance 180 

In Extremity 181 

The Last Bed 182 

Jealousy 183 

Spring after the War . . . . . . 186 

The Wife's Christmas 189 

Wooed and Won 191 

Song 193 

My Riches 194 

The Book of Nature 196 

I Cannot Tell 198 

Dead Love 20© 

Figs of Thistles ........ 262 

Coming Round 204 

Peccavi 207 

Otway • . 209 

Impatience 211 

The Lamp on the Prairie . . . 213 

Compensation 219 

Our Good President 223 

Christmas 226 

Sugar Making 230 

My Friend . . . 234 

Reconciled 247 





A MOXKISH LEGEXD. 

EAUTIFUL stories, by tongue and 
pen. 
Are told of holy women and men, 
Who have heard, entranced in 
some lonely cell. 
The thinors not lawful for lip to tell ; 
And seen, when their souls were caught away, 
What they might not say. 

But one of the sweetest in tale or rhyme 
Is told of a monk of the olden time. 
Who read all day in Ms sacred nook 
The words of the good Saint Austin's book. 
Where he tells of the city of God that best 
Last place of rest. 



Sighing, the holy father said, 
As he shut the volume he had read: 
•• Methinks if heaven shall only be 
A Sabbath long as eternity. 
Its bliss will at last be a weary reign, 
And its peace be pain." 
1 



? A MONKISH LEGEND. 

So he wandered, musing under his hood, 
Far into the depths of a solemn wood ; 
Where a bird was singing, so soft and clear, 
That he paused and listened with charmed 

ear; 
Listened, nor knew, while thus intent. 
How the moments went. 

But the music ceased, and the sweet spell broke, 
And as if from a guilty dream he woke, 
That holy man, and he cried aghast, 
" Mea culpa/ an hour has passed, 
And I have not counted my beads, nor prayed 
To the saints for aid I " 

Then, amazed he fled ; but his horror grew, 
For the wood was strange, and the pathway 

new; 
Yet, with trembling step, he hurried on, 
Till at last the open plain was won. 
Where, grim and black, o'er the vale around, 
The convent frowned. 

" Holy Saint Austin ! " cried the monk. 
And down on the ground for terror sunk ; 
For lo! the convent, tower, and cell, 
Sacred crucifix, blessed bell, 
Had passed away, and in their stead. 
Was a ruin spread. 



A MONKISH LEGEXD. 3 

Tn that hour, while the rapture held him fast, 
A century had come and passed ; 
And he rose an altered man. and went 
His way. and knew what the vision meant : 
For a mighty truth, till then unknown. 
By that trance was shown. 

And he saw how the saints, with their Lord, 

shall say, 
A thousand years are but as a day ; 
Since bliss itself must grow from bliss. 
And holiness from holiness; 
And love, while eternity's ages move. 
Cannot tire of love ' 




A WEARY HEART. 

Ye winds, that talk among the pines, 
In pity whisper soft and low ; 

And from my trailing garden vines, 
Bear the faint odors as ye go ; 

Take fragrance from the orchard trees, 
From the meek violet in the dell; 

Gather the honey that the bees 
Have left you in the lily's bell ; 

Pass tenderly as lovers pass, 

Stoop to the clover-blooms your wings. 
Find out the daisies in the grass, 

The sweets of all insensate things ; 

With muffled feet, o'er beds of flowers, 
Go through the valley to the height, 

Where frowning walls and lofty towers 
Shut in a weary heart to-night; 

Go comfort her, who fain would give 
Her wealth below, her hopes above, 

For the wild freedom that ye have 
To kiss the humblest flower ye love ! 



A GOOD DAY. 

Earth seems as peaceful and as bright 
As if the year that might not stay. 

Had made a sweet pause in her flight, 
To keep another Sabbath day. 

And I, as past the moments roll, 
Forgetting human fear and doubt, 

Hold better Sabbath, in my soul, 

Than that which Nature holds without. 

Help me, O Lord, if I shall see 

Times when I walk from hope apart. 

Till all my days but seem to be 

The troubled week-days of the heart. 

Help me to find, in seasons past, 

The hours that have been good or fair, 

And bid remembrance hold them fast. 
To keep me wholly from despair. 

Help me to look behind, before. 
To make my past and future form 

A bow of promise, meeting o'er 
The darkness of my day of storm. 



THE HERO OF FORT WAGNER, 

Fort Wagner! that is a place for us 

To remember well, my lad! 
For us, who were under the guns, and know 

The bloody work we had. 

1 should not speak to one so young, 

Perhaps, as I do to you ; 
But you are a soldier's son, my boy. 

And you know what soldiers do. 

And when peace comes to our land again. 
And your father sits in his home. 

You will hear such tales of war as this, 
For many a year to come. 

We were repulsed from the Fort, you know. 

And saw our heroes flill. 
Till the dead were piled in bloody heaps 

Under the frowning wall. 

Yet crushed as we were and beaten back, 

Our spirits never bowed; 
And gallant deeds that day were done 

To make a soldier proud. 



THE HERO OF FORT WAGNER. 7 

Brave men were there, for their country's sake 

To spend their latest breath ; 
But the bravest was one who gave his life 

And his body after death. 

No greater words than his dying ones 
Have been spoken under the sun ; 

Not even his, who brought the news 
On the field at Ratisbon. 

I was pressing up, to try if yet 

Our men might take the place. 
And my feet had slipped in his oozing blood 

Before I saw his face. 

His face ! it was black as the skies o'erhead 
With the smoke of the angry guns ; 

And a gash in his bosom showed the work 
Of our country's traitor sons. 

Your pardon, my poor boy! I said, 

I did not see you here ; 
But I will not hurt you as I pass ; 

I '11 have a care ; no fear ! 

He smiled ; he had only strength to say 

These words, and that was all: 
" I 'm done gone, Massa ; step on me ; 

And you can scale the wall ! " 



COMING HOME. 

O BROTHERS aod sisters, growing old, 

Do you all remember yet 
That home, in the shade of the rustling trees, 

Where once our household met? 

Do you know how we used to come from school. 
Through the summer's pleasant heat; 

With the yellow fennel's golden dust 
On our tired little feet? 

And how sometimes in an idle mood 

We loitered by the way ; 
And stopped in the woods to gather flowers. 

And in the fields to play ; 

Till warned by the deep'ning shadow's fall, 

That told of the coming night, 
We climbed to the top of the last, long hill, 

And saw our home in sight! 

And, brothers and sisters, older now 

Than she whose life is o'er. 
Do you think of the mother's loving face, 

That looked from the open door? 



COMING HOME. 

Alas, for the changing things of time ; 

That home in the dust is low ; 
And that loving smile was hid from us, 

In the darkness, long ago! 

And we have come to life's last hill, 

From which our weary eyes 
Can almost look on the home that shines 

Eternal in the skies. 

So, brothers and sisters, as we go, 

Still let us move as one, 
Always together keeping step, 

Till the march of life is done. 

For that mother, who waited for us here, 

Wearing a smile so sweet. 
Now waits on the hills of paradise 

For her children's comins: feet ! 



MANY MANSIONS. 

Her silver lamp half-filled with oil, 
Night came, to still the day's turmoil, 
And bring a respite from its toil. 

Gliding about with noiseless tread, 

Her white sheets on the ground she spread, 

That wearied men might go to bed. 

No watch was there for me to keep. 
Yet could I neither rest nor sleep, 
A recent loss had struck so deep. 

I felt as if Omnipotence 

Had given us no full recompense 

For all the ills of time and sense. 

So I went, wandering silently. 
Where a ^reat river sought the sea ; 
And fashioned out the life to be. 

It was not drawn from book or creed. 
And yet, in very truth and deed. 
It answered to my greatest need. 



MANY MANSIOXS. H 

And satisfied myself, I thought, 

A heaven so good and perfect ought 

To give to each what all have sought. 



Near where I slowly chanced to stray, 
A youth, and old man, worn and gray, 
Down through the silence took their way ; 

And the night brought within my reach, 
As each made answer unto each. 
Some portion of their earnest speech. 

The patriarch said : " Of all we know, 
Or all that we can dream below, 
Of that far land to which we go, 

" This one assurance hath expressed. 
To me, its blessedness the best — 
' He giveth his beloved rest.' " 

And the youth answered : '* If it be 

A place of inacti^-ity. 

It cannot be a heaven to me. 

'• Surely its joy must be to lack 
These hindrances that keep us back 
From rising on a shinino track : 



1"2 MANY MANSIONS. 

" Where each shall find his own true height, 
Though in our place, and in our light, 
We differ as the stars of night." 

I listened, till they ceased to speak ; 
And my heart answered, faint and weak, 
Their heaven is not the heaven I seek! 



Yet their discourse awoke again 
Some hidden memories that had lain 
Long undisturbed within my brain. 

For ofl, when bowed earth's care beneath, 
I had asked others of their faith 
In the life following after death ; 

And what that better world could be. 
Where, from mortality set free. 
We put on immortality. 

And each in his reply had shown 
That he had shaped and made his own 
By the best things which he had known ; 

Or fashioned it to heal the woe 
Of some great sorrow, which below 
It was his hapless lot to know. 



MANY MANSIONS. 13 

A mother once had said to me, 
Over her dead: "My heaven will be 
An undivided family." 

One sick with mortal doubts and fears, 
With looking blindly through her tears, 
The way that she had looked for years. 

Told me : " That world could have no pain, 
Since there we should not wait in vain 
For feet that will not come again." 

A lover dreamed that heaven would be 
Life's hour of perfect ecstacy, 
Drawn out into eternity! 

]\Ien bending to their hopeless doom. 
Toiling as in a living tomb, 
Down shafts of everlasting gloom, 

Out of the dark had answered me : 
" Where there is light for us to see 
Each other's faces, heaven must be." 

An aged man, who bowed his head 
With reverence o'er the page, and read 
The words that ancient prophets said, 



14 MANY MANSIONS. 

Talked of a glory never dim, 
Of the veiled face of cherubim, 
And harp, and everlasting hymn; 

Saw golden streets and glittering towers — 
Saw peaceful valleys, white with flowers. 
Kept never-ending Sabbath hours. 

One, who the cruel sea had crossed, 
And seen, through billows madly tossed, 
Great shipwrecks, where brave souls were lost, 

Thus of the final voyage spake : 

" Coming to heaven must be to make 

Safe port, and no more journeys take." 

And now their words of various kind 
Come back to my bewildered mind, 
And my faith staggered, fiiint and blind. 

One moment ; then this truth seemed plain, 
These have not trusted God in vain ; 
To ask of Him must be to gain. 

Every imasinable irood. 

We, erring, sinful, mortal, would 

Give our beloved, if we could ; 



MANY MANSIONS. 15 

And shall not He, whose care enfolds 
Our life, and all our way controls, 
Yet satisfy our longing souls? 

Since mortal step hath never been, 
And mortal eye hath never seen, 
Past death's impenetrable screen, 

Who shall dare limit Him above, 

Or tell the ways in which He '11 prove 

Unto His children all His love ? 

Then joy through all my being spread. 
And, comforted myself, I said ; 
Oh, weary world, be comforted ! 

Souls, in your quest of bliss grown weak — 
Souls, whose great woe no words can speak — 
Not always shall ye vainly seek ! 

Men whose whole lives have been a night, 
Shall come from darkness to the light; 
Wanderers shall hail the land in sight. 

Old saints, and martyrs of the Lamb, 
Shall rise to sing their triumph psalm, 
And wear the crown, and bear the palm. 



16 2IANY MANSIONS. 

And the pale mourner, with bowed head, 
Who, for the living lost, or dead, 
Here weeps, shall there be gently led. 

To feel, in that celestial place. 

The tears wiped softly from her face. 

And know love's comforting embrace. 

So shall we all, who groan in this, 
Find, in that new life's perfectness. 
Our own peculiar heaven of bliss — 

More glorious than our faith believed, 
Brighter than dreams our hope has weaved, 
Better than all our hearts conceived. 

Therefore will I wait patiently. 
Trusting, where all God's mansions be. 
There hath been one prepared for me ; 

And go down calmly to death's tide, 
Knowing, when on the other side 
I wake, I shall be satisfied. 



HIDDEN SORROW. 

He has gone at last ; yet I could not see 
When he passed to his final rest ; 

For he dropped asleep as quietly 
As the moon drops out of the west. 

And I only saw, though I kept my place, 

That his mortal life was o'er, 
By the look of peace across his face, 

That never was there before. 

Sorrow he surely had in the past. 

Yet he uttered never a breath ; 
His lips were sealed in life as fast 

As you see them sealed in death. 

Why he went from the world I do not know, 

Hiding a grief so deep ; 
But I think, if he ever had told his woe. 

He had found a better sleep. 

For our trouble must some time see the light. 
And our anguish will have way ; 

And the infant, crying out in the night. 
Reveals what it hid by day. 



18 HIDDEN SORROW. 

And just like a needful, sweet relief 

To that bursting heart it seems, 
When the little child's unspoken grief 

Runs into its pretty dreams. 

And I think, though his face looks hushed and 
mild, 

And his slumber seems so deep, 
He will sob in his grave, as a little child 

Keeps sobbing on in its sleep. 




A WOMAN'S CONCLUSIONS. 

I SAID, if I might go back again 

To the very hour and place of my birth ; 

Might have my life whatever I chose, 
And live it in any part of the earth ; 

Put perfect sunshine into my sky, 

Banish the shadow of sorrow and doubt ; 

Have all my happiness multiplied, 
And all my suffering stricken out ; 

If I could have known in the years now gone. 
The best that a woman comes to know ; 

Could have had whatever will make her blest, 
Or whatever she thinks will make her so; 

Have found the highest and purest bliss 
That the bridal-wreath and ring inclose ; 

And gained the one out of all the w^orld, 
That my heart as well as my reason chose : 

And if this had been, and I stood to-night 
By my children, lying asleep in their beds 

And could count in my prayers, for a rosary, 
The shining row of their golden heads ; 



20 A WOMAX'S COXCLUSIOXS. 

Yea ! 1 said, if a miracle such as this 

Could be wrought for lue, at my bidding, still 

I would choose to have my past as it is, 
And to let my future come as it will ! 

I would not make the path I have trod 

More pleasant or even, more straight or wide ; 

Nor change my course the breadth of a hair, 
This way or that way, to either side. 

My past is mine, and I take it all ; 

Its weakness — its folly, if you please ; 
Nay, even my sins, if you come to that, 

May have been my helps, not hindrances! 

If I saved my body from the flames 

Because that once I had burned my hand; 

Or kept myself from a greater sin 

By doing a less — you will understand ; 

It was better I suffered a little pain. 
Better I sinned for a little time. 

If the smarting warned me back from death, 
And the sting of sin withheld from crime. 

"Who knows its strength, by trial, will know 
"What strength must be set against a sin ; 

And how temptation is overcome 

Be has learned, who has felt its power within ! 



A WOMAX'S CONCLUSIONS. 



21 



And who knows how a life at the last may show ? 

Why, look at the moon from where we stand! 
Opaque, uneven, you say; yet it shines, 

A luminous sphere, complete and grand! 

So let my past stand, just as it stands. 
And let me now, as I may, grow old; 

I am what I am, and my life for me 

Is the best — or it had not been, I hold. ? 




ANSWERED. 

I THOUGHT to find some healing clime 
For her I loved ; she found that shore, 

That city, whose inhabitants 

Are sick and sorrowful no more. 

I asked for human love for her; 

The Loving knew how best to still 
The infinite yearning of a heart, 

Which but infinity could fill. 

Such sweet conmiunion had been ours 
I prayed that it might never end ; 

My prayer is more than answered ; now 
I have an angel for my friend. 

I wished for perfect peace, to soothe 
The troubled anguish of her breast ; 

And, numbered with the loved and called, 
She entered on untroubled rest. 

Life was so fair a thing to her, 
I wept and pleaded for its stay : 

My wish was granted me, for lo ! 
She hath eternal life to-day. 



DISENCHANTED. 

The time has come, as I knew it must, 

She said, when we should part. 
But I ceased to love when I ceased to trust, 

And you cannot break my heart. 

Nay, I know not even if I am sad, 

And it must be for the best. 
Since you only take what I thought I had, 

And leave to me the rest. 

Not all the stars of my hope are set. 

Though one is in eclipse ; 
And I know there is truth in the wide world yet, 

If it be not on your lips. 

And though I have loved you, who can tell 

If you ever had been so dear, 
But that my heart was prodigal 

Of its wealth, and you were near. 

I brought each rich and beautiful thing 

From my love's great treasury; 
And I thought in myself to make a king 

With the robes of royalty. 



24 DISEN CHAN TED. 

But you lightly laid my honors down, 
And you taught me thus to know, 

Not every head can wear the crown. 
That the hands of love bestow. 

So, take whatever you can from me. 
And leave me as you will ; 

The dear romance and the poesy 
Were mine, and I have them still. 

I have them still ; and even now. 
When my fancy has her way. 

She can make a king of such as thou, 
Or a god of common clay. 




WINTER FLOWERS. 

Though Nature's lonesome, leafless bowers, 
With Winter's awful snows are white, 

The tender smell of leaves and flowers 
Makes May-time in my room to-night: 

While some, in homeless poverty, 

Shrink moaning from the bitter blast ; 

What am I, that my lines should be 
In good and pleasant places cast? 

When other souls despairing stand, 
And plead with famished lips to-day, 

Why is it that a loving hand 
Should scatter blossoms in my way ? 

O flowers, with soft and dewy eyes, 

To God my gratitude reveal ; 
Send up your incense to the skies 

And utter, for me, what I feel ! 

innocent roses, in your buds 

Hiding for very modesty ; 
O violets, smelling of the woods, 

Thank Him, with all your sweets for me ! 



26 WINTER FLOWERS. 

And tell Him, I would give this hour 
All that is mine of good beside, 

To have the pure heart of a flower, 
That has no stain of sin to hide. 




ARTHUR'S WIFE. 

I 'm getting better, Miriam, though it tires me 
yet to speak ; 

And the fever, clinging to me, keeps me spirit- 
less and weak. 

And leaves me with a headache always when 
it passes off; 

But I'm better, almost well at last, except this 
wretched cough I 

I should have passed the livelong day alone 

here but for you ; 
For Arthur never comes till night, he has so 

much to do I 
And so sometimes I lie and think, till my heart 

seems nigh to burst. 
Of the hope that lit my future, when I watched 

his coming first. 

I wonder why it is that now he does not seem 

the same ; 
Perhaps my fancy is at fault, and he is not to 

blame ; 
It surely cannot be because he has me always 

near. 



28 ARTHUR'S WIFE. 



For I feared and felt it long before the time 
he brought me here. 



Yet still, I said, his wife will charm each 
shadow from his brow, 

What can I do to win his love, or prove my lov- 
ing now ? 

So I waited, studying patiently his every look 
and thought ; 

But I fear that I shall never learn to please him 
as I ought. 

I 've tried so many ways to smooth his path 
where it was rough, 

But I always either do too much, or fail to do 
enough ; 

And at times, as if it wearied him, he pushes 
off my arm — 

The very things that used to please have some- 
how lost their charm. 

Once, when I wore a pretty gown, a gown he 
use to praise, 

I asked him, laughing, if I seemed the sweet- 
heart of old days. 

Tie did not know the dress, and said, he never 
could have told, 

'T was not that unbecoming one, which made me 
look so old ! 



ARTHUR'S WIFE. 29 

I cannot tell how any thing I do may seem 

to him. 
Sometimes he thinks me childish, and sometimes 

stiff and prim ; 
Yet you must not think I blame him, dear ; I 

could not wrong him so — 
He is very good to me, and I am happy, too, 

you know ! 

But I am often troublesome, and sick too much, 

I fear, 
And sometimes let the children cry when he is 

home to hear. 
Ah me ! if I should leave them, with no other 

care than his ! 
Yet he says his love is wiser than my foolish 

fondness is. 

I think he 'd care about the babe. I called him 

Arthur, too — 
Hoping to please him when I said, I named 

him, love, for you ! 
He never noticed any child of mine, except this 

one. 
So the girls would only have to do as they have 

always done. 

Give me my wrapper, Miriam. Help me a little, 
dear! 



^0 ARTHURS WIFE. 

When Arthur comes home, vexed and tired, he 

must not find me here. 
Why, I can even go down-stairs : I always make 

the tea. 
He does not like that any one should wait on 

him but me. 

He never sees me lying down when he is home, 

you know. 
And I seldom tell him how I feel, he hates to 

hear it so ; 
Yet I'm sure he grieves in secret at the thought 

that I may die, 
Thouijh he often laughs at me, and savs, 

" You 're stronger now than I." 

Perhaps there are some men who love more 

than they ever say : 
He does not show his feelings, but that may 

not be his way. 
Why, how foolishly I 'm talking, when I know 

he 's good and kind I 
But we women always ask too much ; more 

than we ever find. 

My slippers, Miriam ! No, not those ; bring me 

the easy pair. 
I surely heard the door below ; I hear him on 

the stair! 



AF.TnUB-S WIFE. 31 

There comes the old. sharp pain again, that 

almost makes me frown : 
And it seems to me I always cough when I try 

to keep it down. 

Ah. Arthur ! take this chair of mine ; I feel so 

well and strong ; 
Besides. I am getting tired of it — I Ve sat here 

all day long. 
Poor dear ! you work so hard for me. and I 'm 

so useless, too ! 
A trouble to myself and. worse, a trouble i^ow 

to YOU. 






ALAS ! 

Since, if you stood by my side to-day, 

Only our hands could meet, 
What matter that half the weary world 

Lies out between our feet ; 

That I am here by the lonesome sea. 
You by the pleasant Rhine ? — 

Our hearts were just as far apart 
If I held your hand in mine ! 

Therefore, with never a backward glance, 

1 leave the past behind ; 
And standing here by the sea alone, 

I give it to the wind. 

I give it all to the cruel wind, 

And I have no word to say ; 
Yet, alas ! to be as we have been, 

And to be as we are to-day ! 



MOTHER AND SON. 

Brightly for him the future smiled, 

The world was all untried ; 
He had been a boy, almost a child, 

In your household till he died. 

And you saw him, young and strong and fair, 

But yesterday depart ; 
And now you know he is lying there 

Shot to death through the heart ! 

Alas, for the step so proud and true 
That struck on the war-path's track ; 

Alas, to go, as he went from you. 

And to come, as they brought him back ! 

One shining curl from that bright young head, 

Held sacred in your home, 
Is all you will have to keep in his stead 

In the years that are to come. 

You may claim of his beauty and his youth 

Only this little part — 
It is not much with which to staunch 

The wound in a mother's heart ! 
3 



34 MOTHER AND SON. 

It is not niiich with which to dry 

The bitter tears that flow ; 
Not much in your empty hands to lie 

As the seasons come and go. 

Yet he has not hved and died in vain, 

For proudly you may say, 
He has left a name, with never a stain 

For your tears to w^ash away. 

And evermore shall your life be blest, 
Though your treasures now are few. 

Since you gave for your country's good the best 
God ever gave to you ! 




COMPLAINT. 

" Though we were parted, or though he had 
died," 

She said, " I could bear the worst, 
If he only had loved me at the last. 

As he loved me at the first. 

" But woe is me ! " said the hapless maid, 

" That ever a lover came ; 
Since he who lit in my heart the fire. 

Has failed to tend the flame. 

" Ah ! why did he pour in my life's poor cup 

A nectar so divine, 
If he had no power to fill it up 

With a draught as pure and fine ? 

" Why did he give me one holiday, 

Then send me back to toil ? 
Why did he set a lamp in my house. 

And leave it lacking oil ? 

" Why did he plant the rose in my cheeks 
When he knew it could not thrive — 



36 COMPLAINT. 

That the dew of kisses, only, keeps 
The true blush-rose alive? 

" If he tired so soon of the song I sung 

In our love's delicious June, 
Why did he set the thoughts of my heart 

All to one blessed tune? 

" Oh, if he were either true or false, 

My torment might have end : 
He hath been, for a lover, too unkind ; 

Too loving for a friend ! 

" And there is not a soul in all the world 
So wretclied as mine must be, 

For I cannot live on his love," she said, 
" Nor die of his cruelty." 



T 



TRUE LOVE. 

I THINK true love is never blind, 
But rather brings an added light ; 

An inner vision quick to find 

The beauties hid from common sight. 

No soul can ever clearly see , 

Another's highest, noblest part ; 

Save through the sweet philosophy 
And loving wisdom of the heart. 

Your unanointed eyes shall fall 

On him who fills my world with light; 

You do not see my friend at all, 

You see what hides him from your sight. 

I see the feet that fain would climb. 
You, but the steps that turn astray : 

I see the soul unharmed, sublime ; 
You, but the garment, and the clay. 

You see a mortal, weak, misled. 
Dwarfed ever by the earthly clod ; 

I see how manhood, perfected. 
May reach the stature of a god. 



38 



TRUE LOVE. 



Blinded I stood, as now you stand, 
Till on mine eyes, with touches sweet, 

Love, the deliverer, laid his hand, 
And lo ! I worship at his feet ! 




THEODORA. 

By that name you will not know her, 
But if words of mine can show her 
In such way that you may see 
How she doth appear to me ; 
If, attending you shall find 
The fair picture in my mind, 
You will think this title meetest, 
Gift of God, the best and sweetest. 

All her free, impulsive acting. 
Is so charming, so distracting. 
Lovers think her made, I know, 
Only for a play-fellow. 
Coral lips, concealing pearls 
Hath she, 'twixt dark rows of curls ; 
And her words, dropt soft and slowly, 
Seem half ravishing, half holy. 

She is for a saint too human, 
Yet too saintly for a woman; 
Something childish in her face 
Blended with maturer grace, 
Shows a nature pure and good, 
Perfected by motherhood ; — 



40 THEODORA. 

Eyes Madonna-like, love-laden, 
Holier than befit a maiden. 

Simple in her faith unshrinking, 
AYise as sages in her thinking ; 
Showing in her artless speech 
All she of herself can teach ; 
Hiding love and thought profound, 
In such depths as none may sound; 
One, though known and comprehended, 
Yet with wondrous mystery blended. 

Sitting meekly and serenely, 
Sitting in a state most queenly ; 
Knowing, though dethroned, discrowned, 
That her kingdom shall be found; 
That her Father's child must be 
Heir of immortality ; 
This is still her highest merit, 
That she ruleth her own spirit. 

Thou to whom is given this treasure, 
Guard it, love it without measure ; 
If forgotten it should lie 
In a weak hand carelessly. 
Thou mayst wake to miss and weep. 
That which thou didst fail to keep ; 
Crying, when the gift is taken, 
" I am desolate, forsaken ! " 



UP AND DOWN. 

The sun of a sweet summer morning 

Smiled joyously down from the sky, 
As we climbed up the mountain together, — 

My charming companion and I ; 
The wild birds that live in the bushes 

Sang love, without fear or disguise, 
And the flowers, with soft, blushing faces, 

Looked love from their wide-open eyes. 

In and out, through the sunshine and shadow, 

We went where the odors are sweet; 
And the pathway that led from the valley 

Was pleasant and soft to our feet : 
And while we were hopefully talking — 

For our hearts and our thoughts seemed 
in tune — 
Unaware, we had climbed to the summit, 

And the sun of the morning, to noon. 

For my genial and pleasant companion 
Was so kind and so helpful the while. 

That I felt how the path of a lifetime 

Might be brightened and cheered by his 
smile ; 



42 UP AND DOWN. 

And how blest, with his care and his <ruid- 
ance, 

Some true, loving woman might be, — 
Of course, never hoping or wishing 

Such fortune would happen to me! 

AVe spoke of life, death, truth, and friend- 
ship, — 

Things hoped for, below and above, 
And then, sitting down at the summit, 

We talked about loving, and love ; 
And he told me the years of his lifetime 

Till now had been barren and drear, 
In tones that were touching and tender 

As exquisite music to hear. 

And I saw in the eyes looking on me, 

A meaning that could not be hid, 
Till I blushed — Oh, it makes me so angry. 

Even now, to remember I did ! — 
As, taking my hand, he drew nearer, 

And said, in his tenderest tone, 
'T was like the dear hand that so often 

Had lovingly lain in his own. 

And that, 't was not flattery only. 

But honest and merited praise, 
To say I resembled his sweetheart 

Sometimes in my words and my ways ; 



UP AXD DOWN. 43 

That I had the same womanly feelings, 
My thoughts were as noble and high ; 

But that she was a trifle, say, fairer, 
And a year or two younger than f. 

Then he told me my welfare was dearer 

To him than I might understand, 
And he wished he knew any one worthy 

To claim such a prize as my hand ; 
And his darling, I surely must love her, 

Because she was charming and good. 
And because she had made him so hajjpy ; 

And I said I was sure that I should — 

That nothing could make me so happy 

As seeing him happy ; but then 
I was wretchedly tired and stupid. 

And wished myself back in the glen. 
That the sun. so delightful at morning, 

Burned now with a merciless flame ; 
And I dreaded again to go over 

The long, weary way that we came. 

So we started to go down the mountain ; 

But the wild birds, the poor silly things, 
Had finished their season of courting. 

And put their heads under their wings ; 
And the flowers that opened at morning, 

All blushing with joy and surprise, 



44 UP AND DOWN. 

Had turned from the sun's burning glances, 
And sleepily shut up their eyes. 

Every thing I had thought so delightful 

Was gone, leaving scarcely a trace ; 
And even my charming companion 

Grew stupid and quite commonplace. 
He was not the same man that I thought him - 

I can't divine why ; but at once, 
The fellow, who had been so charming 

Was changed from a dear to a dunce. 

But if any young man needs advising, 

Let me whisper a word in his ear : — 
Don't talk of the lady that 's absent 

Too much to the lady that 's near. 
My kindness is disinterested ; 

So in speaking to me never mind ; 
But the course I advise you to follow 

Is safe, as a rule, you will find. 

You may talk about love in the abstract. 

Say the ladies are charming and dear ; 
But you need not select an example, 

Nor say she is there, or is here. 
When it comes to that last application. 

Just leave it entirely out. 
And give to the lady that 's present 

The benefit still of the doubt ! 



BEYOND. 

When you would have sweet flowers to smell 

and hold, 
You do not seek them underneath the cold 
Close-knitted sod, that hides away the mould ; 

Where in the spring-time past 

The precious seed was cast. 

Not down, but up, you turn your eager eyes ; 
You find in summer the fair flowery prize 
On the green stalk, that reaches towards the 
skies, 

And, bending down its top, 

Gather the fragrant crop. 

If you would find the goal of some pure rill, 
That, following her unrestrained will. 
Runs laughing down the bright slope of the hill, 
Or, with a serious mien. 
Walks through the valley green. 

You do not seek the spot where she was born 
The cavernous mountain chamber, dim, forlorn. 
That never saw the fair face of the morn, 

Where she, with wailing sound. 

First started from the ground ; 



46 BEYOND. 

But rather will you track her windings free, 
To where at last she rushes eagerly 
Into the white arms of her love, the sea, 

And hides in his embrace 

The rapture on her face ! 

If, from the branches of a neigboring tree, 
A bird some morn w^ere missing suddenly, 
That all the summer sang for ecstasy. 

And made your season seem 

Like a melodious dream, 

You would not search about the leafless dell, 
In places where the nestling used to dwell, 
To find the white walls of her broken shell, 

Thinking your child of air. 

Your winged joy, was there ! 

But rather, hurrying from the autumn gale, 
Your feet would follow sununer's flowery trail 
To find her spicy grove, and odorous vale; 

Knowing that birds and song 

To pleasant climes belong. 

Then wherefore, when you see a soul set free 

From this poor seed of its mortality. 

And know you sow not that which is to be. 

Watch you about the tomb, 

For the immortal bloom ? 



BETONI). 47 

Search for your flowers in the celestial grove, 
Look for your precious stream of human love 
In the unfathomable sea above ; 

Follow your missing bird, 

Where songs are always heard ! 




NEARER HOIME. 

One sweetly solemn thought 
Comes to me o'er and o'er ; 

I am nearer home to-day 

Than I ever have been before ; 

Nearer my Father's house, 

Where the many mansions be ; 

Nearer the great white throne, 
Nearer the crystal sea ; 

Nearer the bound of life, 

Where we lay our burdens down : 
Nearer leaving the cross. 

Nearer gaining the crown ! 

But lying darkly between, 

Winding down through the night, 
Is the silent, unknown stream. 

That leads at last to the light 

Closer and closer my steps 
Come to the dread abysm : 

Closer Death to my lips 
Presses the awful chrism. 



XEARER HOME. 4<^ 

Oh, if my mortal feet 

Have almost gained the brink ; 
If it be I am nearer home 

Even to-day than I think ; 

Father, perfect my trust ; 

Let my spirit feel in death, 
That her feet are firmly set 

On the rock of a livinor faith ! 




MARCH CROCUSES. 

FICKLE and uncertain March, 
How could you have the heart, 

To make the tender crocuses 
From their beds untimely start? 

Those foolish, unsuspecting flowers, 

Too credulous to see, 
That the sweetest promises of March 

Are not May's certainty. 

When you smiled a few short hours ago, 
What said your whisper, lio-ht, 

That made them lift their pretty heads 
So hopeful and so bright? 

I could not catch a single word, 

But I saw your light caress ; 
And heard your rough voice softened down 

To a lover's tenderness. 

O cruel and perfidious month, 

It makes me sick and sad. 
To think how yesterday your smile 

Made all the blossoms o-lad ! 



MARCH CROCUSES. 



51 



O trustful, unsuspecting flowers, 
It breaks my heart to know, 

That all your golden heads to-day 
Are underneath the snow! 




THE SPIRITUAL BODY. 

I HAVE a heavenly home, 

To which my soul may come, 
And where forever safe it may abide ; 

Firmly and sure it stands. 

That house not made with hands, 
And garnished as a chamber for a bride! 

'T is such as angels use, 

Such as good men would choose ; 
It hath all fair and pleasant things in sight: 

Its walls as white and fine 

As polished ivory shine. 
And through its windows comes celestial light 

'T is builded fair and good. 

In the similitude 
Of the most royal palace of a king ; 

And sorrow may not come 

Into that heavenly home, 
Nor pain, nor death, nor any evil thing. 

Near it that stream doth pass 
Whose waters, clear as glass. 
Make glad the city of our God with song ; 



THE SPIRITUAL BODY. 53 

Whose banks are fair as those 
Whereon stray milk-white does, 
Feeding among the lilies all day long. 

And friends who once were here 

Abide in dwellings near ; 
They went up thither on a heavenly road; 

While I, though warned to go, 

Yet linger here below, 
Clinging to a most miserable abode. 

The evil blasts drive in 

Through chinks, which time and sin 
Have battered in my wretched house of clay ; 

Yet in so vile a place, 

Poor, unadorned with grace 
I choose to live, or rather choose to stay. 

And here I make my moan 

About the days now gone. 
About the souls passed on to their reward : 

The souls that now have come 

Into a better home, 
And sit in heavenly places with their Lord. 

'T is strange that I should cling 
To this despised thing. 
To this poor dwelling crumbHng round my 
head; 



54 THE SPIRITUAL BODY. 

Making myself content 
In a low tenement 
After my joys and friends alike are fled ! 

Yet I shall not, I know, 

Be ready hence to go, 
And dwell in my good palace, fair and whole, 

Till unrelenting Death 

Blows with his icy breath, 
Upon my naked and unsheltered soul ! 




FAVORED. 

Upon her cheek such color glows, 
And in her eye such light appears, 

As comes, and only comes to those. 

Whose hearts are all untouched by years. 

Yet half her wealth she doth not see, 

Nor half the kindness Heaven hath shown, 

She never felt the poverty 

Of souls less favored than her own. 

When all is hers that life can give. 
How can she tell how drear it seems 

To those, uncomforted, who live 

In dreaming of their vanished dreams. 

Supplied beyond her greatest need 
With lavish hoard of love and trust, 

How shall she pity such as feed 

On hearts that years have turned to dust? 

When sighs are smothered down, and lost 
In tenderest kisses ere they start, 

What knows she of the bitter cost 
Of hiding sorrow in the heart? 



56 FA VORED. 

Wliile fondest care each wish supplies, 
And heart-strings for her frowning break, 

What can she know of one who dies 
For love she scarcely deigns to take? 

What should she know? No weak complaint, 
No cry of pain should come to her, 

If mine were all the woes I paint, 
And she could be my comforter! 




GRACIE. 

Gracie rises with a light 

In her clear face like the sun, 
Like the regal crowned sun 

That at mominor meets her sight : 
Mirthful, merry little one, 
Happy, hopeful little one ; 

What has made her day so bright? 

Who her sweet thoughts shall di\dne, 

As she draweth water up, 

Water from the well-spring up ? 
What hath made the draught so fine, 

That she drinketh of the cup, 

Of the dewy, dripping cup, 
As if tasting royal wine ? 

Tripping up and down the stair. 
Hers are pleasant tasks to-day, 
Hers are easy tasks to-day ; 

Done without a thought of care. 

Something makes her work but play. 
All her work delightful play, 

And the time a holiday. 



58 GRA CIE. 

And her lips make melody, 

Like a silver-singing rill, 

Like a laughing, leaping rill: 
Then she breaks off suddenly ; 

But her heart seems singing still, 

Beating out its music still. 
Though it beateth silently. 

And I wonder what she thinks ; 
Only to herself she speaks. 
Very low and soft she speaks. 

As she plants the scarlet pinks, 

Something plants them in her cheeks, 
Sets them blushing in her cheeks. 

How I wonder what she thinks ! 

To a bruised vine she goes ; 
Tenderly she does her part, 
Carefully she does her part, 

As if, while she bound the rose, 
She were binding up a heart, 
Binding up a broken heart. 

Doth she think but of the rose ? 

Brinfjing odorous leaf and flower 
To her bird she comes elate. 
Comes as one, with step elate, 

Cometh in a happy hour 
To a true and tender mate. 



GRA CIE. 59 

Doth she think of such a mate ? 
Is she trimming cage and bower? 

How she loves the flower she brings ! 

See her press her lips to this, 

Press her rosy mouth to this, 
In a kiss that clings and clings. 

Hath the maiden learned that kiss. 

Learned that lingering, loving kiss, 
From such cold insensate things? 

What has changed our pretty one ? 
A new light is in her eyes. 
In her downcast, drooping eyes, 

As she walks beneath the moon. 

What has waked those piteous sighs, 
Waked her touching, tender sighs ? 

Has love found her out so soon ? 

Even her mother wonderingly 

Saith : " How strange our darling seems. 
How unlike herself she seems." 

And I answer : " Oft we see 
Women living as in dreams, 
When love comes into their dreams. 

What if hers such dreaming be ? " 

But she says, undoubtingly : 
" Whatsoever else it mean. 



60 GRA CIE. 

This it surely cannot mean. 

Gracie is a babe to me, 
Just a child of scarce sixteen, 
And it seems but yestere'en 

That she sat upon my knee." 

Ah wise mother ! if you proved 
Lover never crossed her way, 
I would think the self-same way. 

Ever since the world has moved, 
Babes seemed women in a day ; 
And, alas ! and well-a-day ! 

Men have wooed and maidens loved I 



POOR MARGARET. 

We always called her "poor Margaret," 
And spoke about her in mournful phrase ; 

And so she comes to my memory yet 

As she seemed to me in my childish days. 

For in that which changing, waxeth old. 
In things which perish, we saw her poor, 

But we never saw the wealth untold. 
She kept where treasures alone endure. 

"We saw her wrinkled, and pale, and thin. 
And bowed with toil, but we could not see 

That her patient spirit grew straight within. 
In the power of its upright purity. 

Over and over, every day, 

Bleaching her linen in sun and rain. 
We saw her turn it until it lay 

As white on the grass as the snow had lain ; 

But we could not see how her Father's smile. 

Shining over her spirit there. 
Was whitening for her all the while 

The spotless raiment His people wear. 



62 POOR MARGARET. 

She crimped and folded, smooth and nice, 
All our sister's clothes, when she came to 
wed, — 

(Alas ! that she only wore them twice. 
Once when living, and once when dead ! ) 

And we said, she can have no wedding-day ; 

Speaking sorrowfully, under our breath ; 
While her thoughts were all where they give 
away 

No brides to lovers, and none to death. 

Poor Margaret ! she sleeps now under the sod, 
And the ills of her mortal life are past ; 

But heir with her Saviour, and heir of God, 
She is rich in her Father's House at last 



EARTH TO EARTH. 

His hands with earthly work are done, 
His feet are done with roving; 

We bring him now to thee and ask, 
The loved to take the loving. 

Part back thy mantle, fringed with green, 
Broidered with leaf and blossom. 

And lay him tenderly to sleep, 
Dear Earth, upon thy bosom. 

Thy cheerful birds, thy liberal flowers. 

Thy woods and waters only 
Gave him their sweet companionship 

And made his hours less lonely. 

Though friendship never blest his way. 

And love denied her blisses ; 
No flower concealed her face from him. 

No wind withheld her kisses. 

Nor man hath sighed, nor woman wept 
To go their ways without him ; 

So, lying here, he still will have 
His truest friends about him. 



64 EARTH TO EARTH. 

Then part tliy mantle, fringed with green, 
Broidered with leaf and blossom, 

And lay him tenderly to sleep. 
Dear Earth, upon thy bosom I 




WOMEN. 

T IS a sad truth, yet 't is a truth 
That does not need the proving: 

They give their hearts away, unasked, 
And are not loved for loving. 

Striving to win a little back, 
For all they feel they hide it ; 

And lips that tremble with their love. 
In trembling have denied it. 

Sometimes they deem the kiss and smile 

Is life and love's beginning; 
While he who wins the heart away, 

Is satisfied with winning. 

Sometimes they think they have not found 
The right one for their mating; 

And go on till the hair is white. 
And eyes are blind with waiting. 

And if the mortal tarry still. 
They fill their lamps, undying ; 

And till the midnight wait to hear 
The " Heavenly Bridegroom " crying. 



66 



WOMEX. 



For while she lives, the best of them 
Is less a saint than woman ; 

And when her lips ask love di\ine, 
Her heart asks love that's human! 




LADY MARJORY. 

Thk Lady Marjory lay on her bed, 

Though the clock had struck the hour of 
noon, 
And her cheek on the pillow burned as red 

As the bleeding heart of a rose in June ; 
Like the shimmer and gleam of a golden mist 

Shone her yellow hair in the chamber dim ; 
And a fairer hand was never kissed 

Than hers, with its fingers white and slim. 

She spake to her women, suddenly, — 

"I have lain here long enough," she said; 
"Lain here a year, by night and day. 

And I hate the pillow, and hate the bed. 
So carry me where I used to sit, 

I am not much for your arms to hold ; 
Strange phantoms now through my fancy flit, 

And my head is hot and my feet are cold ! " 

They sat her up once more in her chair, 
And Alice, behind her, grew pale with dread 

As she combed and combed her lady's hair, 
For the fever never left her head. 



68 LADY MARJORY. 

And before her, Rose on a humble seat 
Sat, but her young face wore no smile, 

As she held in her lap her mistress' feet 
And chafed them tenderly all the while. 

'' Once I saw," said the lady, " a saintly nun. 

Who turned from the world and its pleasures 
vain ; — 
When they clipped her tresses, one by one, 

How it must have eased her aching brain! 
If it ached and burned as mine does now, 

And they cooled it thus, it was worth the 
price ; — 
Good Alice, lay your hand on my brow. 

For my head is fire and my feet are ice ! " 

So the patient Alice stood in her place 

For hours behind her mistress' chair. 
Bathing her fevered brow and face, 

Parting and combing her golden hair: 
And Rose, whose cheek belied her name, 

Sitting before her, awed and still, 
Kept at her hopeless task the same 

Till she felt, through all her frame, the chill. 

" How my thoughts," the Lady ^Marjory said, 
" Go slipping into the past once more ; 

As the beads we are stringing slide down a 
thread. 
When we drop the end along tlie floor : 



LADT MAJOR 7. 69 

Only a moment past, they slid 

Thus into the old time, dim and sweet; 
I was where the honeysuckles hid 

My head and the daisies hid my feet. 
I heard my Philip's step again, 

I felt the thrill of his kiss on my brow ; 
Ah! my cheek was not so crimson then. 

Nor my feet in the daisies cold as now ! 

"Dizzily still my senses swim, 

I am far away in a fairy land; 
To the night when first I danced with him, 

And felt his look, as he touched my hand ; 
Then my cheeks were bright with the flush 
and glow 

Of the joy that made the hours so fleet ; 
And my feet were rosy with warmth I know. 

As time to the music they lightly beat. 

" 'T is strange how the things I remember, seem 

Blended together, and nothing plain ; 
A dream is like truth, and truth like a dream. 

With this terrible fever in my brain. 
But of all the visions that ever I had 

There is one returns to plague me most; 
If it were not false it would drive me mad. 

Haunting me thus, like an evil ghost. 

"It came to me first a year ago, 

Though I never have told a soul before, 



70 LADY MARJORY. 

But I dreamed, in the dead of the night you 
know, 

That under the vines beside the door, 
I watched for a step I did not hear, 

Stayed for a kiss I did not feel ; 
But I heard a something hiss in my ear 

Words that I shudder still to reveal. 
I made no sound, and I gave no start, 

But I stood as the dead on the sea-floor stand, 
While the demon's words fell slow on my heart 

As burning drops from a torturer's hand. 

"^ Tour Philip stays,' it said, * to-night, 

Where dark eyes hold him with magic spell ; 
Eyes from the stars that caught their light. 

Not from some pretty blue flower's bell! 
With raven tresses he waits to play. 

They have bound him fast as a bird in a 
snare, 
Did you think to hold him more than a day 

In the feeble mesh of your yellow hair? 

" ' Flowers or pearls in your tresses twist, 

As your fancy suits you, smile or sigh ; 
Or give your dainty hand to be kissed 

By other lips, and he will not die: 
Hide your eyes in the veil of a nun, 

Weep till the rose in your cheek is dim ; 
Or turn to any beneath the sim. 

Henceforth it is all the same to him ! ' 



LADY MARJORY. 71 

" This was before I took mv bed ; — 

Do YOU think a dream could make me ill ; 
Could put a fever in my head. 

And touch my feet with an icy chill ? 
Yet I 've hardly been myself I know 

At times since then, for before my eyes 
The wildest visions come and go. 

Full of all wicked and cruel lies. 

" Once the peal of marriage-bells, without, 

Fell, or seemed to fall on my ear; 
And I thought you went, and softly shut 

The window, so that I might not hear; 
That you turned from my eager look away, 

And sadly bent your eyes on the ground, 
As if you said, 'tis his wedding-day. 

And her heart will break if she hears the 
sound. 

"And dreaming once, I dreamed I woke, 
And heard you whisper, close at hand, 
Men said. Sir Philip's heart was broke. 

Since he gave himself for his wife's broad 
land ; 
That he smiled on none, but frowned instead. 
As he stalked through his halls, like a ghost 
forlorn : 
And the nurse who had held him. a baby, said. 
He had better have died in the day he was 
bom! " 



7f2: LADY MARJORY. 

So. till the low sun, fadinor, cast 

Across her chamber his dying beams, 
The Lady Marjory lived in the past, 

Telling her women of all her dreams. 
Then she changed ; — " I am almost well," she 
said, 

"I feel so strangely free from pain; 
Oh, if only the fever would leave my head, 

And if only my feet were warm again ! 
And something whispers me, clear and low, 

I shall soon be done with Ijing there, 
So to-morrow, when I am better, you know, 

You must come, good Alice, and dress my 
hair. 

" "We will give Sir Philip a glad surprise, 

He will come, I know, at mom or night ; 
And I want the help of your hands and eyes 

To dress me daintily all in white ; 
Bring snowy lilies for my hair; — 

And, Rose, when all the rest is done, 
Take from my satin slippers the pair 

That are softest and whitest, and put them on. 
But take me to bed now, where in the past 

You have placed me many a time and oft; 
I am so tired, I think at last 

I shall sleep, if the pillow is cool and soft." 

So the patient Alice took her head, 

And the sweet Rose took her mistress' feet. 



LADY MARJORY. 73 

And they laid her tenderly on the bed, 

And smoothed the pillow, and smoothed the 
sheet. 
Then she wearily closed her eyes, they say, 

On this world, with all its sorrow and sin; 
And her head and her heart at the break of 
day, 
Were as cold as ever her feet had been! 




THE OLD MAN'S DARLING. 

So I 'm •' crazy," in loving a man of three-score ; 
Why, I never had come to my senses before, 
But I 'm doubtful of yours, if your 're thinking 

to prove 
My insanity, just by the fact of my love. 

You would like to know what are his wonder- 
ful wiles ? 

Only delicate praises, and flattering smiles ! 

'T is no spell of enchantment, no magical art, 

But the way he says '• darling," that goes to 
ray heart. 

Yes, he 's " sixty," I cannot dispute with you 

there. 
But you 'd make him a hundred, I think, if you 

dare ; 
And I 'm glad all his folly of first love is past^ 
Since 1 'm sure, of the two, it is best to be last. 

'' His hair is as white as the snow-drift," you 

say ; 
Then I never shall see it change slowly to gray ; 



THE OLD MAN'S DARLING, 75 

But I almost could wish, for his dear sake alone, 
That my tresses were nearer the hue of his own. 

" He can't see ; " then I '11 help him to see and 

to hear. 
If it 's needful, you know, I can sit very near ; 
And he 's young enough yet to interpret the 

tone 
Of a heart that is beating up close to his own. 

I " must aid him ; " ah ! that is my pleasure 

and pride, 
I should love him for this if for nothing beside ; 
And though I 've more reasons than I can recall, 
Yet the one that " he needs me " is strongest 

of all. 

So, if I 'm insane, you will own, I am sure, 
That the case is so hopeless it 's past any cure ; 
And, besides, it is acting no very wise part, 
To be treating the head for disease of the 
heart. 

And if any thing could make a woman believe 

That no dream can delude, and no fancy de- 
ceive ; 

That she never knew lover's enchantment be- 
fore. 

It 's being the darling of one of three-score ! 



THE UNHONORED. 

Alas, alas! how many sighs 

Are breathed for his sad fate, who dies 

With triumph dawning on his eyes. 

What thousands for the soldier weep, 
From his first battle gone to sleep 
That slumber which is long and deep. 

But who about his fate can tell, 
Who struggled manfully and well; 
Yet fainted on the march, and fell? 

Or who above his rest makes moan. 
Who dies in the sick-tent alone — 
" Only a private, name unknown ! " 

What tears down Pity's cheek have run 

For poets singing in the sun, 

Stopped suddenly, their song half done. 

But for the hosts of souls below, 
Who to eternal silence go, 
Hiding their great unspoken woe ; 



THE VNHONORED. 77 

Who sees amid their ranks go down, 

Heroes, that never won renown. 

And martyrs, with no martyr's crown? 

Unrecognized, a poet slips 

Into death's total, long eclipse, 

With breaking heart, and wordless lips ; 

And never any brother true 

Utters the praise that was his due— • 

" This man was greater than ye knew ! " 

No maiden by his grave appears. 

Crying out in long after years, 

"I would have loved him," through her tears. 

We weep for her, untimely dead, 

Who would have pressed the marriage-bed. 

Yet to Death's chamber went instead. 

But who deplores the sadder fate. 
Of her who finds no mortal mate. 
And lives and dies most desolate ? 

Alas! 'tis sorrowful to know 

That she who finds least love below. 

Finds least of pity for her woe. 



78 THE UNHONORED. 

Hard is her fate who feels life past, 
When loving hands still hold her fast, 
And loving eyes watch to the last. 

But she, whose lids no kisses prest, 

Who crossed her own hands on her breast, 

And went to her eternal rest; 



She had so sad a lot below, 

That her unutterable woe 

Only the pitying God can know! 

Wlien little hands are dropped away 
From the warm bosom where they lay, 
And the poor mother holds but clay ; 

Wliat human lip that does not moan, 
What heart that does not inly groan. 
And make such suffering its own ? 

Yet, sitting mute in their despair, 
With their unnoticed griefs to bear. 
Are childless women everywhere ; 

Who never knew, nor understood, 
That which is woman's greatest good, 
The sacredness of motherhood. 



THE rXHOXORED. 79 

But putting down their hopes and fears, 
Claiming no pit}- and no tears. 
They live the measure of their years. 

They see age stealing on apace, 

And put the gray hairs from their face, 

Xo children's fingers shall displace ! 

Though grief hath many a form and show, 
I think that unloved women know 
The very bottom of life's woe I 

And that the God. who pitying sees, 
Hath yet a recompense for these, 
Kept in the long eternities ! 




THE ONLY ORNAMENT. 

Even as a child too well she knew 
Her lack of loveliness and grace ; 

So, like an unprized weed she grew, 
Grudging the meanest flower its face. 

Often with tears her sad eyes filled, 
Watching the plainest birds that went 

About her home to pair, and build 
Their humble nests in sweet content 

No melody was in her words ; 

You thought her, as she passed along, 
As brown and homely as the birds 

She envied, but without their song. 

She saw, and sighed to see how glad 
Earth makes her fair and favored child; 

While all the beauty that she had 
Was in her smile, nor oft she smiled. 

So seasons passed her and were gone, 

She musing by herself apart ; 
Till the vague longing that is known 

To woman came into her heart. 



THE ONLY ORNAMENT. 81 

That feeling born when fancy teems 
With all that makes this life a good, 

Came to her, with its wondrous dreams, 
That bless and trouble maidenhood. 

She would have deemed it joy to sit 
In any home, or great or small, 

Could she have hoped to brighten it 
For one who thought of her at all. 

At night, or in some secret place. 
She used to think, with tender pain, 

How infants love the mother's face, 
And know not if 't is fair or plain. 

She longed to feast her hungry eyes 
On any thing her own could please ; 

To sing soft, loving, lullabies 
To children lying on her knees. 

And yet beyond the world she went, 
Unmissed, as if she had not been, 

Taking her only ornament, 

A meek and quiet soul within. 

None ever knew her heart was pained, 
Or that she grieved to live unsought ; 

They deemed her cold and self-contained. 
Contented in her realm of thousfht. 



Q2 THE ONLY ORNAMENT. 

Her patient life, when it was o'er, 

Was one that all the world approved; 

Some marv-elled at, some pitied her. 
But neither man nor woman loved. 

Even little children felt the same ; 

Were shy of her, from awe or fear ; — 
I wonder if she knew they came, 

And scattered roses on her bier ! 




JOHN BROWN. 

Men silenced on his faithful lips 

Words of resistless truth and power; — 

Those words, reechoing now, have made 
The gathering war-cry of the hour. 

They thought to darken down in blood 
The light of freedom's burning rays ; 

The beacon-fires we tend to-day 
Were lit in that undpng blaze. 

They took the earthly prop and staff 

Out of an unresisting hand ; 
God came, and led him safely on, 

By ways they could not understand. 

They knew not, when from his old eyes 
They shut the world for evermore, 

The ladder by which angels come 
Rests firmly on the dungeon's floor. 

They deemed no \-ision bright could cheer 
His stony couch and prison ward ; 

He slept to dream of Heaven, and rose 
To build a Bethel to the Lord ! 



34 JOHN BROWN. 

They showed to his unshrinking gaze 
The "sentence" men have paled to see 

He read God's writing of " reprieve," 
And grant of endless liberty. 

They tried to conquer and subdue 
By marshalled power and bitter hate; 

The simple manhood of the man 
Was braver that an anned State. 

They hoped at last to make him feel 
The felon's shame, and felon's dread ; 

And lo : the martjVs crown of joy 
Settled forever on his head! 



GARIBALDI IX PIEDMONT. 

HEiniED in by the hosts of the Austrians, 

No succor at hand, 
Adown the green passes of Piedmont, 

That beautiful land, 

Moves a patriot band. 

Two long days and nights, watchful, sleepless, 

Have they ridden, nor yet 
Checked the rein, though the feet of their horses, 

In the ripe vineyard set, 

By its wine have been wet. 

"What know they of weariness, hunger, 

What good can they lack, 
TThile they follow their brave Garibaldi, 

Who never turns back, 

Never halts on his track? 

By the Austrians outnumbered, surrounded, 
On left and on right ; 

Strong and fearless he moves as a giant, 
Who rouses to fight 
From the slumbers of night. 



86 GARIBALDI IX PJEDMOXT. 

So, over the paths of Orfano, 

His brave horseman tread, 
Long after the sun, halting wearied, 

Hath hidden his head 

In his tent-folds of red. 

Every man with his eye on his leader, 
Whom a spell must have bound, 

For he rideth as still as the shadow. 
That keeps step on the ground, 
In a silence profound. 

With the harmony Nature is breathing, 

His soul is in tune ; 
He is bathed in a bath of the splendor 

Of the beautiful moon, 

Of the air soft as June I 

But what sound meets the ear of the soldier ; 

What menacing tone ? 
For look I how the horse and the rider 

Have suddenly grown 

As if carved in stone. 

Leaning down toward that fair grove of olives 

He waits ; doth it mean 
That he catches the tramp of the Austrians, 

That his quick eye hath seen 

Their bayonets' sheen? 



GARIBALDI IN PIEDMONT. 87 

Nay! there, where the thick leaves about her 

By the music are st.irred, 
Sits a nightingale singing her rapture, 

And the hero hath heard 

But the voice of a bird I 

A hero ! ay, more than a hero 

By this he appears ; 
A man, with a heart that is tender, 

Unhardened by years; 

Who shall tell what he hears ? 

Not the voice of the nightingale only, 
Floating soft on the breeze. 

But the music of dear human voices, 
And blended with these 
The sound of the seas. 

Ah, the sea, the dear sea ! from the cradle 

She took him to rest ; 
Leaping out from the arms of his mother, 

He went to her breast 

And w^as softly caressed. 

Perchance he is back on her bosom. 
Safe from fear or alarms, 

Clasping close as of old that first mistress 
Whose wonderful charms 
Drew him down to her arms. 



88 GARIBALDI IN PIEDMONT. 

By the memories that come with that singing 

His soul has been wiled 
Far away from the danger of battle ; 

Transported, beguiled, 

He again is a child, 

Sitting down at the feet of the mother, 
Whose prayers are the charm 

That ever in conflict and peril 

Has strengthened his arm, 
And kept him from harm. 

Nay, who knows but his spirit that moment 
Was gone in its quest 

Of that bright bird of paradise, vanished 
Too soon from the nest 
AVhere her lover was blest! 

For unerring the soul finds its kindred, 

Below or above ; 
And, as over the great waste of waters 

To her mate goes the dove, 

So love seeks its love. 

Did he see her first blush, burning softly 
His kisses beneath; 

Or her dear look of love, when he held her 
Disputing with Death 
For the last precious breath? 



GARIBALDI IX PIEDMOXT. 89 

Lost Anita ! sweet ^ision of beauty. 

Too sacred to tell 
Is the tale of her dear life. that, hidden 

In his heart's deepest cell, 

Is kept safely and well. 

And what matter his dreams '. He whose bosom 
With such rapture can glow 

Hath something within him more sacred 
Than the hero may show, 
Or the patriot know. 

And this praise, for man or for hero, 
The best were, in sooth ; 

His heart, through life's conflict and peril, 
Has kept its first truth, 
And the dreams of its vouth. 



§i^ 






do^t:s' eyes. 

There are eyes that look through us, 

AVith the power to undo us. 
Eyes of the lo\ingest, tenderest bUie, 
clear as the heavens and as truthful too; 

But these are not my love's eyes, 

For, behold, he hath doves' eyes ! 

There are eyes half defiant, 

Half meek and compliant : 
Black eyes, with a wondrous, witching charm, 
To bring us good or to work us harm ; 

But these are not my love's eyes. 

For. behold, he hath doves' eyes! 

There are eyes to our feeling 

Forever appealing : 
Eyes of a helpless, pleading brown. 
That into our very souls look down ; 

But these are not my love's eyes, 

For, behold, he hath doves' eyes! 

O eyes, dearest, sweetest. 
In beauty completest ; 



DOVES' EYES. 



91 



Whose perfectness cannot be told in a word, — 
Clear and deep as the eyes of a soft, brooding 
bird ; 
These, these, are my love's eyes, 
For, behold, he hath doves' eyes ! 




EQUALITY. 

Most favored lady in the land, 

I well can bear your scorn or pride ; 

For in all truest wealth, to-day, 
I stand an equal by your side! 

No better parentage have you, — 
One is our Father, one our Friend ; 

The same inheritance awaits 

Our claiming, at the journey's end. 

No broader flicrht vour thoucrht can take, 
Faith on no firmer basis rest; 

Nor can the dreams of fancy wake 
A sweeter tumult in your breast 

Life may to you bring every good, 

TVhich from a Father's hand can fall ; 

But if true lips have said to me, 
" I love you," I have known it all ! 



HOMESICK. 

Comfort me with apples ! 
I am sick unto death, I am sad to despair; 
My trouble is more than my strength is to bear ; 
Back again to the green hills that first met my 

sight 
I come, as a child to its mother, to-night ; — 

Comfort me with apples! 

Comfort me with apples ! 
Bring the ripe mellow fruit from the early 

" sweet bough," — 
(Is the tree that we used to climb growing there 

now ?) 
And " russets," whose cheeks are as freckled 

and dun 
As the cheeks of the children that play in the 

sun ; — 

Comfort me with apples! 

Comfort me with apples! 
Gather those streaked with red, that we named 

" morning-light." 
Our good father set, when his hair had grown 

white, 



94 HOMESICK. 

The tree, though he said, when he planted the 

root, 
*' The hands of another shall gather the 

fruit ; " — 

Comfort me with apples ! 

Comfort me with apples ! 
Go down to the end of the orchard, and bring 
The fair " lady-jfingers," that grew by the spring ; 
Pale " bell-flowers," and " pippins," all burnished 

with gold. 
Like the fruit the Hesperides guarded of old ; — 
Comfort me with apples ! 

Comfort me with apples ! 
Get the sweet "junietta," so loved by the 

bees, 
And the " pearmain," that grew on the queen 

of the trees; 
And close by the brook, where they hang ripe 

and lush, 
Go and shake down the best of them all, — 

" maiden's-blush ; " — 

Comfort me with apples! 

Comfort me with apples ! 
For lo! I am sick; I am sad and opprest; 
I come back to the place where, a child, I was 

blest. 



HOMESICK. 95 

Hope is false, love is vain, for the old things I 

sigh : 
And if these cannot comfort me. then I must 

die 1 

Comfort me with apples! 




EBB-TIDE. 

TTiTH her white face full of agony, 

Under her dripping locks, 
I hear the wretched, restless sea, 

Complaining to the rocks. 

Helplessly in her great despair, 

She shudders on the sand, 
The bright weeds dropping from her hair, 

And the pale shells from her hand. 

T is pitiful thus to see her He, 
With her beating, heaving breast, 

Here, where she fell, when cast aside, 
Sobbing herself to rest. 

Alas, alas ! for the foolish sea, 

Why was there none to say : 
The wave that strikes on the heartless stone 

Must break and i\ill away ? 

Why could she not have known that this 
Would be her fate at length ; — 

For the hand, unheld, must slip at last, 
ThouMi it cling with love's own strength? 



"FIELD PREACHING." 

I HAVE been out to-day in field and wood, 
Listening to praises sweet and counsel good 
Such as a little child had understood, 

That, in its tender youth, 
Discerns the simple eloquence of truth. 

The modest blossoms, crowding round my way, 
Though they had nothing great or grand to say. 
Gave out their fragrance to the wind all day; 

Because His loving breath, 
With soft persistence, won them back from 
death. 

And the right royal lily, putting on 
Her robes, more rich than those of Solomon, 
Opened her gorgeous missal in the sun, 
And thanked Him, soft and low, 
Whose gracious, liberal hand had clothed her so. 

When wearied, on the meadow-grass I sank ; 
So narrow was the rill from which I drank. 
An infant might have stepped from bank to 
bank ; 

7 



98 ''FIELD preaching:' 

And the tall rushes near 
Lapping together, hid its waters clear. 

Yet to the ocean joyously it went ; 
And rippling in the fullness of content, 
"Watered the pretty flowers that o'er it leant; 
For all the banks were spread 
With delicate flowers that on its bounty fed. 

The stately maize, a fair and goodly sight, 
With serried spear-points bristling sharp and 

bright, 
Shook out his yellow tresses, for delight, 

To all their tawny length, 
Like Samson, glorying in his lusty strength. 

And every little bird upon the tree. 
Ruffling his plumage bright, for ecstacy, 
Sang in the wild insanity of glee ; 

And seemed, in the same lays, 
Calling his mate and uttering songs of praise. 

The golden grasshopper did chirp and sing; 
The plain bee, busy wnth her housekeeping, 
Kept humming cheerfully upon the wing, 

As if she understood 
That, with contentment, labor was a good. 

I saw each creature, in his own best place, 
To the Creator lift a smiling face, 



''FIELD preaching:' 99 

Praising continually His wondrous grace ; 

As if the best of all 
Life's countless blessings was to live at all ! 

So with a book of sermons, plain and true, 
Hid in my heart, where I might turn them 

through, 
I went home softly, through the falling dew. 
Still listening, rapt and calm, 
To Nature giving out her evening psalm. 

While, far along the west, mine eyes discerned. 
Where, lit by God, the fires of sunset burned, 
The tree-tops, unconsumed, to flame were 
turned ; 

And I, in that great hush, 
Talked with His angels in each burning bush ! 




HAPPY WOMEN. 

liEPATiEXT women, as you wait 

In cheerful homes to-night, to hear 

The sound of steps that, soon or late, 
Shall come as music to your ear ; 

Forget yourselves a little while, 
And think in pity of the pain 

Of women who ^s-ill never smile 
To hear a coming step again. 

"With babes that in their cradle sleep, 
Or cling to you in perfect trust ; 

Think of the mothers left to weep. 
Their babies lying in the dust 

And when the step you wait for comes, 
And all your world is full of light, 

women, safe in happy homes, 

Pray for all lonesome souls to-night! 



HYMN. 

How dare I in thy courts appear, 
Or raise to tliee my voice ? 

I only serve thee, Lord, with fear, 
With trembling I rejoice. 

I have not all forgot thy word, 
Nor wholly gone astray; 

I follow thee, but O my Lord, 
So faint, so far away ! 

That thou wilt pardon and receive 
Of sinners even the chief, 

Lord, I believe, — Lord, I believe ; 
Help thou mine unbelief! 




GATHERING BLACKBERRIES. 

Little Daisy smiling wakes 
From her sleep as morning breaks, 

Why, she knoweth well ; 
Yet if you should ask her, surely 
She would answer you demurely, 

That she cannot tell. 

Careful Daisy, with no sound. 
Slips her white feet to the ground, 

Saying, very low. 
She must rise and help her mother, 
And be ready, if her brother 

Needs her aid, to go ! 

Foolish Daisy, o'er her lips 
Only that poor falsehood slips, 

Truth is in her cheeks ; 
Her own words cannot deceive her. 
Her own heart will not believe her. 

In a blush it speaks. 

Daisy knows that, when the heat 
Dries the dew upon the wheat. 
She will be away ; 



GATHERING BLACKBERRIES. 103 

She and Ernest, just another 
Who, she says, is like a brother, 
Making holiday. 

For the blackberries to-day 
Will be ripe, the reapers say. 

Ripe as they can be ; 
And not wholly for the pleasure. 
But lest others find the treasure, 

She must go and see. 

Eager Daisy, at the gate 
Meeting Ernest, scarce can wait. 

But she checks her heart; 
And she says, her soft eyes beaming 
With an innocent, grave seeming ; 

"Is it time to start?" 

Cunning Daisy tries to go 
Very womanly and slow. 

And to act so well 
That, if any one had seen them. 
With the dusty road between them, 

What was there to tell? 

Happy Daisy, when they gain 
The green windings of the lane, 

Where the hedge is thick ; 
For they find, beneath its shadow. 



104 GATHERING BLACKBERRIES. 

Wild sweet roses in the meadow, 
More than they can pick. 

Bending low, and rising higher, 
Scarlet pinks their lamps of fire 

Lightly swing about ; 
And the wind that blows them over 
Out of sight among the clover, 

Seems to blow them out I 

Doubting Daisy, as she hies 
Toward the field of berries, cries : 

" What if they be red ? " 
Black and ripe they find them rather, 
Black and ripe enough to gather, 

As the reapers said. 

Lucky Daisy, Ernest finds 
Berries for her in the vines. 

Hidden where she stands ; 
And with fearless arm he pushes 
Back the cruel, brierj- bushes. 

That would hurt her hands. 

He would have her hold her cup 
Just for him to fill it up. 

But away she trips ; 
Picking daintily, she lingers 
Till she dyes her pretty fingers 

Redder than her lips. 



GATHERiyG BLACKBERRIES. 105 

Thoughtful Daisy, what she hears, 
What she hopes, or what she fears, 

Who of us can tell ? . 
For if, gomg home, she carries 
Richer treasure than her berries, 

She will guard it well ! 

Puzzled Daisy does not know 
Why the sun, who rises slow, 

Hurries oyerhead ; 
He, that lingered at the morning, 
Drops at night with scarce a warning 

On his cloudy bed. 

All too narrow at the start 
Seemed the path, they kept apart, 

Thouo^h the way was rouo^h : 
Now the path, that through the hollow 
Closely side by side they follow, 

Seemeth wide enough. 

Hopeful Daisy, will the days 
That are brightening to her gaze 

Brighter grow than this ? 
Will she. mornings without number. 
Wake up restless from her slumber, 

Just for happiness ? 

Will the friend so kind to-day, 
Always push the thorns away, 



106 GATHERING BLACKBERRIES. 

With which earth is rife? 
Will he be her true, true lover, 
Will he make her cup run over 

With the wine of life ? 

Blessed Daisy, will she be, 
If above mortality 

Thus she stands apart; 
Cursed, if the hand, unsparing. 
Let the thorns fly backward, tearing 

All her bleeding heart! 

Periled Daisy, none can know 
What the future has to show ; 

There must come what must; 
But, if blessings be forbidden, 
Let the truth awhile be hidden — 

Let her hope and trust. 

Let all women bom to weep. 

Their heart's breaking — all who keep 

Hearts still young and whole. 
Pray, as fearing no denying, 
Pray with me, as for the dying, 

For this maiden's soul ! 



A TENT SCENE. 

Our generals sat in their tent one night, 

On the Mississippi's banks, 
Where Vicksburg sullenly still held out 

Against the assaulting ranks. 

They could hear the firing as they talked, 

Long after set of sun ; 
And the blended noise of a thousand guns 

In the distance seemed as one. 

All at once Sherman started to his feet, 

And listened to the roar. 
His practiced ear had caught a sound, 

That he had not heard before. 

" They have mounted another gun on the walls 

'T is new," he said, " I know ; 
I can tell the voice of a gun, as a man 

Can tell the voice of his foe ! 

" What ! not a soul of you hears but me ? 

No matter, I am right; 
Bring me my horse ! I must silence this 

Before I sleep to-night!" 



108 A TENT SCENE. 

He was gone ; and they listened to the ring 

Of hoofs on the distant track ; 
Then talked and wondered for a while, — 

In an hour he was back. 

" Well, General ! what is the news ? " they cried, 
As he entered flushed and worn ; 

" We have picked their gunners off, and the gun 
Will be dislodged at morn ! " 




LOSS AND GAIN. 

Life grows better every day, 
If we live in deed and truth ; 

So I am not used to grieve 
For the vanished joys of youth. 

For though early hopes may die, 
Early dreams be rudely crossed; 

Of the past we still can keep 

Treasures more than we have lost. 

For if we but try to gain, 

Life's best good, and hold it fast, 

We grow very rich in love 
Ere our mortal days are past. 

Rich in golden stores of thought, 
Hopes that give us wealth untold ; 

Rich in all sweet memories, 
That grow dearer, growing old. 

For when we have lived and loved, 
Tasted suffering and bliss, 

All the common things of life 
Have been sanctified by this. 



110 LOSS AND GAIN. 

What my eyes behold to-day 
Of this good world is not all, 

Earth and sky are crowded full 
Of the beauties they recall. 

When I watch the sunset now, 
As its glories change and glow 

I can see the light of suns 
That were faded long ago. 

When I look up to the stars, 

I find burning overhead 
All the stars that ever shone 

In the nights that now are dead. 

And a loving, tender word, 

Dropping from the lips of truth. 

Brings each dear remembered tone 
Echoing backward from my youth. 

When I meet a human face, 
Lit for me with light divine, 

I recall all loving eyes. 

That have ever answered mine. 

Therefore, they who were my friends 
Never can be changed or old ; 

For the beauty of their youth 
Fond remembrance well can hold. 



LOSS AND GAIN. HI 

And even they whose feet here crossed 
O'er the noiseless calm abyss, 

To the better shore which seemed 
Once so far away from this ; 

Are to me as dwelling now 
Just across a pleasant stream., 

Over which they come and go, 
As we journey in a dream. 




DRAWING WATER. 

He had drunk from founts of pleasure, 
And his thirst returned again; 

He had hewn out broken cisterns^ 
And behold! his work was vain. 

And he said, "Life is a desert, 
Hot, and measureless, and dry ; 

And God will not give me water, 
Though I strive, and faint, and die.** 

Then he heard a voice make answer, 
" Rise and roll the stone away ; 

Sweet and precious springs lie hidden 
In thy pathway every day." 

And he said, his heart was sinful. 
Very sinful was his speech : 

" All the cooling wells I thirst for 
Are too deep for me to reach." 

But the voice cried, " Hope and labor ; 

Doubt and idleness is death ; 
Shape a clear and goodly vessel, 

"With the patient hands of faith." 



DRAWING WATER. 



113 



So he wrought and shaped the vessel, 
Looked, and lo ! a well was there ; 

And he drew up living water, 
With a golden chain of piayer. 




TOO LATE. 

Blessings, alas ! unmerited, 
Freely as evening dews are shed 
Each day on my unworthy head. 

So that my very sins but prove 
The sinlessness of Him above 
And His unutterable love. 

And yet, as if no ear took heed, 
Not what I ask, but what I need. 
Comes down in answer, w^hen I plead. 

So that my heart with anguish cries. 

My soul almost within me dies, 

'Twixt what God gives, and what denies. 

For howsoe'er with good it teems. 
The life accomplished never seems 
The blest fulfillment of its dreams. 

Therefore, when nearest happiness, 
I only say, The thing I miss — 
That would have perfected my bliss ! 



TOO LATE. 115 

When harvests great are mine to reap, 
Too late, too late ! I sit and weep, 
My best-beloved lies asleep ! 

Sometimes my griefs are hard to bear, 
Sometimes my comforts I would share, 
And the one dearest is not there. 

That which is mine to-day, I know. 
Had made a paradise below, 
Only a little year ago. 

The sunshine we then did crave, 
As having almost power to save, 
Keeps now the greenness of a grave. 

To have our dear one safe from gloom, 
We planned a fair and pleasant room. 
And lo ! Fate builded up a tomb. 

An empty heart, with cries unstilled. 
An empty house, with love unfilled, 
These are the things our Father willed. 

And bowing to Him, as we must. 
Whose name is Love, whose way is just, 
We have no refuge, but our trust. 



LOVERS AND SWEETHEARTS. 

Fair youth, too timid to lift your eyes 

To the maiden ^yith downcast look, 
As you mingle the gold and brown of your 
curls 

Together over a book ; 
A fluttering hope that she dare not name 

Her trembling bosom heaves ; 
And your heart is thrilled, when your fingers 
meet, 

As you softly turn the leaves. 

Perchance you two will walk alone 

Next year at some sweet day's close, 
And your talk will fall to a tenderer tone. 

As you liken her cheek to a rose ; 
And then her face will flush and glow, 

With a hopeful, happy red ; 
Outblushing all the flowers that grow 

A-near in the garden-bed. 

If you plead for hope, she may bashful drop 
Her head on your shoulder, low ; 

And you will be lovers and sweethearts then 
As youths and maidens go: 



LOVERS AND SWEETHEARTS. 117 

Lovers and sweethearts, dreaming dreams, 

And seeing visions that please, 
With never a thought that life is made 

Of great realities ; 

That the cords of love must be strong as death 

Which hold and keep a heart, 
Not daisy-chains, that snap in the breeze, 

Or break with their weight apart; 
For the pretty colors of youth's fair morn 

Fade out from the noonday sky ; 
And blushing loves, in the roses born, 

Alas ! with the roses die ! 

But the love, that when youth's morn is, past, 

Still sweet and true survives, 
Is the faith we need to lean upon 

In the crises of our lives ; 
The love that shines in the eyes grown dim, 

In the voice that trembles speaks ; 
And sees the roses, that years ago 

Withered and died in our cheeks ; 

That sheds a halo round us still, 

Of soft immortal light, 
When we change youth's golden coronal 

For a crown of silver white : 
A love for sickness and for health, 

For rapture and for tears; 



118 LOVERS AXD SWEETHEARTS. 

That will live for us, and bear with us 
Through all our mortal years. 

And such there is ; there are lovers here, 

On the brink of the grave that stand. 
Who shall cross to the hills beyond, and walk 

Forever hand in hand ! 
Pray, youth and maid, that your end be theirs, 

Who are joined no more to part; 
For death conies not to the living soul. 

Nor age to the loving heart ! 




THE ROSE. 

The sun, who smiles wherever he goes, 

Till the flowers all smile again, 
Fell in love one day with a bashful rose, 

That had been a bud till then. 

So he pushed back the folds of the soft green 
hood 

That covered her modest grace, 
And kissed her as only the bold sun could. 

Till the crimson burned in her face. 

But woe for the day when his golden hair 

Tangled her heart in a net; 
And woe for the night of her dark despair. 

When her cheek wdth tears was wet! 

For she loved him as only a young rose could ; 

And he left her crushed and weak, 
Striving in vain with her faded hood 

To cover her burning cheek. 



JENNIE. 

You have sent me from her tomb 
A poor withered flower to keep, 
Broken off in perfect bloom, 

Such as hers, who lies asleep — 
Underneath the roses lies. 
Hidden from your mortal eyes, 
Never from your heart concealed. 
Always to your soul revealed. 

Oh, to think, as day and night 

Come and go, and go and come, 
How the smile which was its light 

Hath been darkened in your home ! 
Oh, to think that those dear eyes. 
Copied from the summer skies, 
Could have veiled their heavenly blue 
From the sunshine, and from you ! 

Oh, to have that tender mouth, 
"With its loveliness complete, 

Shut up in its budding youth 
From all kisses, fond and sweet! 

Fairest blossom, red and rare. 

Could not with her lips compare; 



JEXXIE. 121 

Yea, her mouth's young beauty shamed 
All the roses ever named. 

VMiy God hid her from your sight, 

Lea\nng anguish in her place, 
At the noonday sent the night. 

Night that almost hid His face, 
Not to us is fully shown, 
Not to mortals can be known. 
Though they strive, through tears and doubt. 
Still to guess His meaning out. 

Full of mystery 'tis, and yet 

If you clasped still those charms, 
Mother, might you not forget 

Mothers who have empty arms ? 
If you satisfied in her 

Every want and every need, 
Could you be a comforter 

To the hearts that moan and bleed ? 

Take this solace for your woe : 

God's love never groweth dim ; 
All of goodness that you know. 

All your lo^^ng comes from Him ! 
You say, •• She has gone to death I " 
Very tenderly, God saith : 
" Better so ; I ynaJce her mine. 
And my love exceedeth thine ! " 



ARCHIE. 

Oh to be back in the cool summer shadow 
Of that old maple-tree down in the meadow ; 
Watching the smiles that grew dearer and 

dearer. 
Listening to lips that drew nearer and nearer; 
Oh to be back in the crimson-topped clover, 
Sitting again with my Archie, my lover ! 

Oh for the time when I felt his caresses 
Smoothing away from my forehead the tresses ; 
"When up from my heart to my cheek went the 

blushes, 
As he said that my voice was as sweet as the 

thrushes ; 
As he told me, my eyes were be\*itchingly 

jetty, 
And I answered, 'twas only my love made 

them pretty I 

Talk not of maiden reserve or of duty. 
Or hide from my vision such visions of beauty ; 
Pulses above may beat calmly and even, — 
We have been fashioned for earth, and not 
heaven ; 



ARCHIE. 123 

Angels are perfect, I am but a woman ; 
Saints may be passionless, Archie is human. 

Say not that heaven hath tenderer blisses 
To her on whose brow drops the soft rain of 

kisses ; 
Preach not the promise of priests or evan- 
gels,— 
Love-crowned, who asks for the crown of the 

angels ? 
Yea, all that the wall of pure jasper incloses, 
Takes not the sweetness from sweet bridal 
roses ! 

Tell me, that when all this life shall be over, 
I shall still love him, and he be my lover; 
That mid flowers more fragrant than clover or 

heather 
My Archie and I shall be always together, 
Loving eternally, met ne'er to sever, 
Then you may tell me of heaven forever ! 



COWPER'S COXSOLATIOX* 

He knew what mortals know when tried 
By suffering's worst and last extreme; 
He knew the ecstacy allied 

To bliss supreme. 

Souls, hanging on his melody. 

Have caught his rapture of belief; 
The heart of all humanity 

Has felt his grief. 

In sweet compassion and in love 

Poets about his tomb have trod; 
And softly hung their wreaths above 

The hallowed sod. 

His hymns of victory, clear and strong, 

Over the hosts of sin and doubt. 

Still make the Christian's batt!e-song. 

And triumph-shout 

♦ The most important events of Cowper's latter years were 
audibly announced to him before they occurred. We find him 
wntinfr of Mrs. Unwin's " approaching: and sudden death," 
when her health, although feel)le, was not such as to occasion 
alarm. His lucid inter^-als, and the return of his disorder, 
were announced to him in the same remarkable manner.— 
Cowper's Audible Illusions. 



COWPER'S CONSOLATION. 125 

Tasting sometimes his Father's grace, 

Yet for wise purposes allowed 
Seldom to see the " smiling face " 

Behind the cloud; 

Surely when he was left the prey 

Of torments only Heaven can still, 
" God moved in a mysterious way " 

To work His will. 

Yet many a soul through life has trod 

Untroubled o'er securest ground, 
Nor knew that " closer walk with God " 
His footsteps found. 

With its great load of grief to bear, 

The reed, though bruised, might not break ; 
God did not leave him to despair, 

Nor quite forsake. 

The pillow by his tear-drops wet. 

The stoniest couch that heard his cries. 
Had near a golden ladder set 

That touched the skies. 

And at the morning on his bed. 

And in sweet visions of the night. 
Angels, descending, comforted 

His soul with light. 



126 COWPER'S COXSOLATIOX. 

Standing upon the hither side, 

How few of all the earthly host 
Have signaled those whose feet have trod 
The heavenly coast. 

Yet his it was at times to see, 

In glimpses faint and half-revealed, 
That strange and awful mystery 

By death concealed. 

And, as the glory thus discerned 

His heart desired, with strong desire; 
By seraphs touched, his sad lips burned 
With sacred fire. 

As ravens to Elijah bare, 

At morn and eve, the promised bread ; 
So by the spirits of the air 

His soul was fed. 

And, even as the prophet rose 

Triumphant on the flames of love. 
The fiery chariot of his woes 

Bore him above. 

Oh, shed no tears for such a lot. 

Nor deem he passed uncheered, alone ; 
He walked with God, and he was not, 

God took his own ! 



A PRAYER. 

I ASK not wealth, but power to take 
And use the things I have aright, 

Not years, but wisdom that shall make 
My life a profit and delight. 

I ask not. that for me, the plan 
Of good and ill be set aside ; 

But that the common lot of man 
Be nobly borne, and glorified. 

I know I may not always keep 

My steps in places green and sweet, 

Nor find the pathway of the deep 
A path of safety for my feet ; 

But pray, that when the tempest's breath 
Shall fiercely sweep my way about, 

I make not shipwreck of my faith 
In the unbottomed sea of doubt : 

And that, though it be mine to know 
How hard the stoniest pillow seems. 

Good angels still may come and go, 
About the places of my dreams. 



128 A PRATER. 

I do not ask for love below, 

That friends shall never be estranged ; 
But for the power of loving, so 

My heart may keep its youth unchanged. 

Youth, joy, wealth — Fate I give thee these ; 

Leave faith and hope till life is past ; 
And leave my heart's best impulses 

Fresh and unfailing to the last! 




MEMORIAL. 

Toiling early, and toiling late, 

Though her name was never heard, 

To the least of her Saviour's little ones, 
She meekly ministered, — 

Publishing good news to the poor ; 

She came to their homes unsought, 
And her feet on the hills were beautiful, 

For the blessings which they brought. 

Such a perfect life as hers, again, 

In the world we may not see; 
For her heart was full of love, and her hands 

Were full of charity. 

Oh woe for us! cried the weak and poor, 
And the weary ones made moan ; 

And the mourners went about the streets, 
When she went to her home alone. 

And, seeing her go from the field of life, 

From toiling, early and late, 
We said, What good has she gained, to show 

For a sacrifice so great ? 
9 



130 MEMORIAL. 

We might have learned from the husbandman 

To wait more patiently. 
Since his seed of wheat lies under the snow, 

Not quickened, except it die. 

For when we raised our eyes again 
From their sorrow's wintry night. 

We saw how the deeds of good she hid 
Were pushing up to the light. 

And still the precious seed she sowed, 

In patient, sorrowing trust. 
Though not for her mortal eyes to see, 

Comes blossoming out of the dust. 




THE HUNTER'S WIFE. 

My head is sick and my heart is faint, 
I am wearied out with my own complaint, 

Answer me, come to me, then ; 
For, lo ! I have pleaded by every thing 
My brain could dream, or my lips could sing ; 
I have called you lover, "and called you king, 

And man of the race of men ! 

Come to me glad, and I will be glad; 
But if you are weary, or if you are sad, 

I will be patient and meek, 
Nor word, nor smile will I seem to crave ; 
But I '11 sit and wait, like an Eastern slave, 
Or wife, in the lodge of an Indian brave, 

In silence, till you speak. 

Come, for the power of life and death 
Hangs for me on the lightest breath 

Of the lips that I believe ; 
Only pause by the cooling lake. 
Till your weary mule her thirst shall slake ; 
^T were a fearful thing if a heart should break, 

And you held its sweet reprieve ! 



132 THE HUXTER'S WIFE. 

Sleep lightly under the loving moon; 
Rise with the morning, and ride till noon ; 

Ride till the stars are above! 
And as you distance the mountain herds. 
And shame the flight of the summer birds, 
Say softly over the tenderest words 

The poets have sung of love. 

You will come — you are coming — a thousand 

miles 
Away, I can see you press through the aisles 

Of the forest, cool and gray ; 
And my lips shall be dumb till our lips have met, 
For never skill of a mortal yet, 
To mortal words such music set, 

As beats in my heart to-day ! 




RETROSPECT. 

LovrsG One. Bounteous One, 
What have I not received from Thee, 

Throucrhout the seasons that have o-one 
Into the past eternity I 

For looking backward through the year, 
Along the way my feet have pressed, 

1 see sweet places everywhere. 

Sweet places, where my soul had rest. 

And. though some human hopes of mine 
Are dead, and buried from my sight, 

Yet from their graves immortal flowers 
Have sprung, and blossomed into light. 

Body, and heart, and soul, have been 
Fed by the most convenient food ; 

My nights are peaceful all the while. 
And all my mortal days are good. 

]My sorrows have not been so light, 
The chastening hand I could not trace 

Xor have my blessings been so great 
That they have hid mv Father's face. 



HU:S1AN AND DIVINE. 

Vile, and deformed by sin I stand, 
A creature earthy of the earth ; 

Yet fashioned by God's perfect hand, 
And in His likeness at my birth. 

Here in a wretched land I roam, 
As one who had no home but this; 

Yet am invited to become 
Partaker in a world of bliss. 

A tenement of misery, 

Of clay is this to which I cling; 
A royal palace waits for me, 

Built by the pleasure of my King ! 

My heavenly birthright I forsake, — 
An outcast, and unreconciled; 

The manner of His love doth make 
My Father own me as His child. 

Shortened by reason of man's wrong. 
My evil days I here bemoan ; 

Yet know my life must last as long 
As His, who struck it from his own. 



HUMAN AND DIVINE. 135 

Turned wholly am I from the way, — 

Lost, and eternally undone ; 
I am of those, though gone astray. 

The Father seeketh through the Son. 

I wander in a maze of fear, 

Hid in impenetrable night, 
Afar from God, — and yet so near. 

He keeps me always in His sight. 

I am as dross, and less than dross. 
Worthless as worthlessness can be ; 

I am so precious that the cross 
Darkened the universe for me ! 

I am unfit, even from the dust, 

Master ! to kiss thy garment's hem ; 

I am so dear, that Thou, though just, 
Wilt not despise me nor condemn. 

Accounted am I as the least 

Of creatures valueless and mean ; 

Yet heaven's own joy shall be increased 
If e'er repentance wash me clean. 

Naked, ashamed, I hide my face, 

All seamed by guilt's defacing scars ; 

I may be clothed with righteousness 
Above the brightness of the stars. 



136 



HUMAN AND DIVINE. 



Lord, I do fear that I shall go, 

Where death and darkness wait for me ; 

Lord, I believe, and therefore know 
I have eternal life in Thee ! 




THE PRIZE. 

Hope wafts my bark, and round my way 

Her pleasant sunshine lies ; 
For I sail with a royal argosy 

To win a royal prize. 

A maiden sits in her loveliness 
On the shore of a distant stream, 

And over the waters at her feet 
The lilies float, and dream. 

She' reaches down, and draws them in. 
With a hand that hath no stain ; 

And that lily of all the lilies, her hand, 
Is the prize I go to gain. 

Her hair in a yellow flood falls down 
From her forehead low and white ; 

I would bathe in its billowy gold, and dream. 
In its sea of soft delight. 

Her cheek is as fair as a tender flower, 
When its blushing leaves dispart ; 

Oh; my rose of the world, my regal rose, 
I must wear you on my heart : 



L38 



THE PPdZE. 



I must kiss your lips, so sweetly closed 
O'er their pearly treasures fair ; 

Or strike on their coral reef, and sink 
In the waves of my dark despair ! 




TRIED AND TRUE. 

Our life is like a march, where some 
Fall early from the ranks, and die ; 

And some, when times of conflict come, 
Go over to the enemy. 

And he who halts upon the way — 
Wearied in spirit and in frame — 

To call his roll of friends, will find 
How few make answer to their name ! 

And those who share our youth and joy, 
Not always keep our love and trust, 

When days of awful anguish bow 
Our heads with sorrow to the dust. 

My friend ! in such a fearful hour. 
When heart and spirit sank dismayed. 

From thee the words of comfort came — 
From thee, the true and tender aid. 

Therefore, though many another friend 
With youth and youthful pleasure goes, 

Thou art of such as I would have 
Walk with me till life's solemn close. 



140 



TRIED AND TRUE. 



Yea, with me when earth's trials are done, 
If I be found, when these shall cease, 

Worthy to stand with those who wear 
White raiment on the hills of peace. 




THE HARMLESS LUXURY. 

Her skies, of whom I sing, are hung 
With sad clouds, dropping saddest tears; 

Yet some white days, like pearls, are strung 
Upon the dark thread of her years. 

And as remembrance turns to slip 

Through fingers fond the treasures rare, 

Ever her thankful heart and lip 
Run over into song and prayer. 

With joys more exquisite and deep 

Than hers, she knows this good world teems, 

Yet only asks that she may keep 
The harmless luxury of dreams. 

Thankful that, though her life has lost 
The best it hoped, the best it willed. 

Her sweetest dream has not been crossed, 
Or worse — but only half fuMilled. 

And that beside her still, to wile 

Her thought from sad and sober truth. 

Are Hope and Fancy, all the while 
Feeding her heart's eternal youth. 



142 



THE HARMLESS LUXURY. 



And who shall say that they who close 
Their eyes to Hope and Fancy's beams, 

Are living truer lives than those, 

The dreamers, who believe their dreams! 




A DAY DREAM. 

If fancy do not all deceive, 

If dreams have any truth, 
Thy love must summon back to me 

The glories of my youth ; 
For if but hope unto my thought 

Such transformation brings, 
May not fruition have the power 

To change all outward things ! 

Come, then, and look into mine eyes 

Till faith hath left no doubt ; 
So shalt thou set in them a light 

That never can go out ; 
Or lay thy hand upon my hair, 

And keep it black as night ; 
The tresses that had felt that touch 

Would shame to turn to white. 

To me it were no miracle. 
If, when I hear thee speak. 

Lilies around my neck should bloom 
And roses in my cheek ; 



144 A DAY DREAM. 

Or if the joy of thy caress, 
The wonder of thy smiles, 

Smoothed all my forehead out again 
As perfect as a child's. 

My lip is trembling with such bliss 

As mortal never heard ; 
My heart, exulting to itself, 

Keeps singing like a bird; 
And while about my tasks I go 

Quietly all the day, 
I could laugh out, as children laugh, 

Upon the hills at play. 

thou, whom fancy brings to me 
With morning's earliest beams, 

Wlio walkest with me down the night, 
The paradise of dreams ; 

1 charge thee, by the power of love, 
To answer to love's call ; 

Wake me to perfect happiness. 
Or wake me not at all! 



OVER-PAYMENT. 

I TOOK a little good seed in my hand, 
And cast it tearfidly upon the land ; 
Saying, of this the fowls of heaven shall eat, 
Or the sun scorch it with his burning heat. 

Yet I, who sowed, oppressed by doubts and 
fears, ' 

Rejoicing gathered in the ripened ears ; 
For when the harvest turned the fields to gold. 
Mine yielded back to me a thousand-fold. 

A little child begged humbly at my door ; 
Small was the gift I gave her, being poor. 
But let my heart go with it ; therefore we 
Were both made richer by that charity. 

My soul with grief was darkened, I was bowed 
Beneath the shadow of an awful cloud ; 
When one, whose sky was wholly overspread. 
Came to me asking to be comforted. 

It roused me from my weak and selfish fears ; 
It dried my own to dry another's tears ; 
The bow, to which I pointed in his skies, 
Set all my cloud with sweetest promises. 

10 



146 VER-PA YMEN T. 

Once, seeing the inevitable way 

My feet must tread, through difficult places 

lay ; 
I cannot go alone, I cried, dismayed, — 
I faint, I fail, I perish, without aid! 

Yet, when I looked to see if help were nigh, 

A creature weaker, wretcheder than I, 

One on whose head life's fiercest storms had 

beat, 
Clung to my garments, falling at my feet. 

I saw, I paused no more ; my courage found, 
I stooped and raised her gently from the 

ground ; 
Through every peril safe I passed at length. 
For she who leaned upon me gave me strength. 

Once, when I hid my wretched self from Him, 
My Father's brightness seemed withdrawn and 

dim ; 
But when I lifted up mine eyes I learned 
His fiice to those who seek is always turned. 

A half-unwilling sacrifice I made ; 

Ten thousand blessings on my head were 

laid ; 
I asked a comforting spirit to descend ; 
God made himself my comforter and friend. 



OVER-PATMEXT. 



147 



I sought His mercy in a faltering prayer, 

And lol His infinite tenderness and care. 

Like a great sea, that hath no ebbing tide, 

Encompassed me with love on every side I 




PEACE. 

O Land, of every land the best — 
O Land, whose glory shall increase ; 

Now in your whitest raiment drest 
For the great festival of peace : 

Take from your flag its fold of gloom, 
And let it float undimmed above. 

Till over all our vales shall bloom 
The sacred colors that we love. 

On mountain high, in valley low. 
Set Freedom's living fires to burn ; 

Until the midnight sky shall show 
A redder pathway than the mom. 

Welcome, with shouts of joy and pride, 
Your veterans from the war-path's track ; 

You gave your boys, untrained, untried ; 
You bring them men and heroes back ! 

And shed no tear, though think you must 
With sorrow of the martyred band ; 

Not even for him whose hallowed dust 
Has made our prairies holy land. 



PEACE. 149 

Though by the places where they fell, 
The places that are sacred ground, 

Death, like a sullen sentinel. 
Paces his everlasting round. 

Yet when they set their country free 
And gave her traitors fitting doom. 

They left their last great enemy, 
Baffled, beside an empty tomb. 

Not there, but risen, redeemed, they go 

Where all the paths are sweet with flowers ; 

They fought to give us peace, and lo ! 
They gained a better peace than ours. 




SUNSET. 

Away in the dim and distant past 

That little valley lies, 
Where the clouds that dimmed life's morning 
hours 

Were tinged with hope's sweet dyes. 

That peaceful spot from which I looked 

To the future — unaware 
That the heat and burden of the day 

Were meant for me to bear. 

Alas, alas! I have borne the heat, 

To the burden learned to bow ; 
For I stand on the top of the hill of life. 

And I see the sunset now ! 

I stand on the top, but I look not back 

To the way behind me spread ; 
Not to the path my feet have trod, 

But the path they still must tread. 

And straight and plain before my gaze 

The certain future lies ; 
But my sun grows larger all the while 

As he travels down the skies. 



SUNSET. 151 

Yea, the sun of my hope grows large and 
grand ; 

For, with my childish years, 
I have left the mist that dimmed my sight, 

I have left my doubts and fears. 

And I have gained in hope and trust. 

Till the future looks so bright, 
That, letting go of the hand of Faith, 

I walk, at times, by sight. 

For we only feel that faith is life. 

And death is the fear of death. 
When we suffer up to the solemn heights 

Of a true and living faith. 

When we do not say, the dead shall rise 

At the resurrection's call ; 
But when we trust in the Lord, and know 

That we cannot die at all ! 



APOLOGY. 

Nay, darling, darling, do not frown, 

Nor call my words unkind ; 
For my speech was but an idle jest, 

As idle as the wind. 

And now that I see your tender heart, 
By my thoughtlessness is grieved, 

I suffer both for the pain I gave. 
And the pain that you received. 

For if ever I have a thought of you. 

Tliat cold or cruel seems, 
I have murdered my peace, and robbed my sleep 

Of the joy of its happy dreams. 

And when I have brous^ht a cloud of grief 

To your sweet face unaware. 
Its shadow covers all my sky 

With the blackness of despair. 

And if in your pillow I have set 

But one sharp thorn, alone, 
That cruel, careless deed, transplants 

A thousand to my own. 



APOLOGY. 



153 



I grieve with your grief. I die in your frown, 

In your joy alone I live ; 
And the blow that it pained your heart to feel, 

It would break my own to give ! 




TWICE SMITTEN. 

O DOUBLY-BOWED and bruised reed, 
What can I offer in thy need ? 

heart, twice broken with its grief, 
What words of mine can brin<T relief? 

soul, o'erwhelmed with woe again, 
How can I soothe thy bitter pain ? 

Abashed and still, I stand and see 
Thy sorrow's awful majesty. 

Only dumb silence may convey 
That which my lip can never say. 

1 cannot comfort thee at all ; 
On the Great Comforter I call ; 

Praying that He may make thee see 
How near He hath been drawn to thee. 



For unto man the angel guest 

Still comes through gates of suffering best; 



TWICE SMITTEN. lob 

And most our Heavenly Father cares 

For whom He smites, not whom He spares. 

So, to His chastening meekly bow, 
Thou art of His beloved now I 




A WOMAN'S ANSWER. 

" Love thee ? " Thou canst not ask of me 
So freely as I fain would give; 

'T is woman's great necessity 

To love so long as she shall live ; 

Therefore, if thou dost lovely prove, 

I cannot choose but give thee love ! 

" Honor thee ? " By her reverence 
The truest woman best is knowTi ; 

She needs must honor Avhere she finds 
A nature loftier than her own ; 

I shall not turn from thee away, 

Unless I find my idol clay ! 

"Obey?" Doth not the stronger will 
Tlie weaker govern and restrain ? 

Most sweet obedience woman yields 
Where wisdom, power, manhood reign. 

I '11 give thee, if thou canst control. 

The meek submission of my soul ! 

Henceforward all my life shall be 

Moulded and fashioned by thine own ; 



A WOMAN'S ANSWER. 



157 



If wisdom, power, and constancy 

In all thy words and deeds are shown 
Whether my vow be yea or nay, 
I '11 " love, and honor, and obey." 




THE SHADOW. 

She was so good, we thought before she died 
To see new glory on her path descend ; 

And could not tell, till she had gone inside, 
T\Tiy there was darkness at her journey's end. 

And then we saw that she had stood, of late, 
So near the entrance to that holy place, 

That, from the Eternal City's open gate, 
The awful shadow fell across her face. 




IN ABSENCE. 

Watch her kindly, stars : 
From the sweet protecting skies 
Follow her with tender eyes, 
Look so lovingly that she 
Cannot choose but think of me : 

Watch her kindly, stars ! 

Soothe her sweetly, night: 
On her eyes, o'erwearied, press 
The tired lids with light caress ; 
Let that shadowy hand of thine 
Ever in her dreams seem mine : 

Soothe her sweetly, night ! 

Wake her gently, morn : 
Let the notes of early birds 
Seem like love's melodious words ; 
Every pleasant sound, my dear, 
When she stirs from sleep should hear 

Wake her gently, morn ! 



160 



IN ABSENCE. 



Kiss her softly, winds : 
Softly, that she may not miss 
Any sweet, accustomed bliss ; 
On her lips, her eyes, her face, 
Till I come to take your place, 

Kiss and kiss her, winds ! 




P^ 



MORNING AND AFTERNOON. 

Fair girl, the light of whose morning keeps 

The flush of its dawning glow, 
Do you ask why that faded woman weeps 

Whose sun is sinking low? 

You look to the future, on, above, 

She only looks to the past ; 
You are dreaming your first sweet dream of love, 

And she has dreamed her last. 

You watch for feet that are yet to tread 
With yours, on a pleasant track ; 

She hears but the echoes dull and dread 
Of feet that come not back. 

You are passing up the flowery slope. 

She left so long ago ; 
Your rainbows shine through the drops of hope, 

And hers through the drops of woe. 

Your night in its visions glides away 
And at morn you live them o'er ; 

From her dreams by night and dreams by day 
She has waked to dream no more. 
11 



162 MORNING AND AFTERNOON. 

You are reaching forth with spirit glad 

To hopes that are still untried ; 
She is burying the hopes she had, 

That have slipped from her arms and died. 



You think of the good, for you in store 



Which the future yet wil! send ; 
While she, she knows it were well for her 
If she made a peaceful end ! 




ENCHANTMENT. 

Her cup of life with joy is full, 

And her heart is thrilling so 
That the beaker shakes in her trembling hand 

Till its sweet drops overflow. 

All day she walks as in a trance ; 

And the thought she does not speak, 
But tries to hide from the world away, 

Burns out in her tell-tale cheek. 

And often from her dreams of night 

She wakes to consciousness, 
As the golden thread of her slumber breaks 

With the burden of its bliss. 

She is almost troubled with the wealth 

Of a joy so great and good. 
That she may not keep it to herself. 

Nor tell it if she would. 

'Tis strange that this should come to one 

Who, all her life before. 
Content in her quiet household ways. 

Has asked for nothino- more. 



164 



ENCHANTMENT. 



And stranger, that he, in whom the power, 

The wonderful magic lay, 
That has changed her world to a paradise. 

Was a man but yesterday! 




LIVING BY FAITH. 

When the way we should tread runs evenly on, 
And light as of noonday is over it all, 

'T is strange how our feet will turn aside 
To paths where we needs must grope and 
fall ; 

How we suffer, knowing it all the while, 
Some phantom between ourselves and the 
light. 

That shuts in disastrous, strange eclipse, 
The very powers of sense and sight. 

Yet we live so, all of us, I think, 
Hiding whatever of truth we choose. 

And deceiving ourselves with a subtilty 
That never a soul but our own could use. 

We see the love in another's eyes, 

Where our own, reflected, is backward sent ; 

Or we hear a tone, that is not in a tone. 
And find a meaning that is not meant. 

We put our faith in the help of those 
Who never have been a help at all; 



166 LIVING BY FAITH. 

And lean on an object that all the while 
We know we are holding back from its fall ! 

When words seem thoughtless, or deeds un- 
kind, 

We are soothed with the kind intent instead ; 
And we say of the absent, silent one : 

He is faithful — but he is sick, or dead ! 

We have loved some dear familiar step. 
That once in its fall was firm and clear ; 

And that household music's sweetest sound 
Came fainter every day to our ear ; 

And then we have talked of the far-away — 

Of the springs to come and the years to be, 
Wlien the rose should bloom in our dear one's 
cheek, 
And her feet should tread in the meadows 
free ! 

We have turned from death, to speak of life. 
When we knew that earthly hope was past ; 

Yet thinking that somehow, God would work 
A miracle for us, to the last. 

We have seen the bed of a cherished friend 
Pushed daily nearer and nearer, till 

It stood at the very edge of the grave. 
And we looked across and beyond it, still. 



LIVING BY FAITH. 167 

Ay, more than this — we have come and gazed 
Down where that dear one's mortal part 

Was lowered forever away from our sight; 
And we did not die of a broken heart. 

Are we blind ! nay, we know the world un- 
known 
Is all we would make the present seem; 
That our Father keeps, till his own good time, 
The things we dream of, and more than we 
dream. 

For we shall not sleep; but we shall be 
changed ; 

And when that change at the last is made, 
We shall bring realities face to face 

With our souls, and we shall not be afraid. 




MY LADY. 

As \dolets, modest, tender eyed, 

The light of their beauty love to hide 

In deepest solitudes ; 
Even thus, to dwell unseen, she chose, 
My flower of womanhood, my rose, 

My lady of the woods ! 

Full of the deepest, truest thought. 
Doing the very things she ought, 

Stooping to all good deeds : 
Her eyes too pure to shrink from such, 
And her hands too clean to fear the touch 

Of the sinfulest in his needs. 

There is no line of beauty or grace 
That was not found in her pleasant face, 

And no heart can ever stir. 
With a sense of human wants and needs, 
With promptings unto the holiest deeds, 

But had their birth in her. 

With never a taint of the world's untruth 
She lived from infancy to youth. 
From youth to womanhood ; 



MY LADY. 169 

Taking no soil in the ways she trod, 
But pure as she came from the hand of God^ 
Before His face she stood. 

My sweetest darling, my tenderest care ! 
The hardest thing that I have to bear 

Is to know my work is past ; 
That nothing now I can say or do 
Will bring any comfort or aid to you, — 

I have said and done the last. 

Yet I know I never was good enough. 
That my tenderest efforts were all too rough 

To help a soul so fine ; 
So the lovingest angel among them all. 
Whose touches fell, with the softest fall. 

Has pushed my hand from thine! 




BORDER-LAND. 

I KNOW you are always by my side 

And I know you love me, Winifred dear, 

For I never called on you since you died. 
But you answered, tenderly, I am here! 

So come from the misty shadows, where 
You came last night, and the night before, 

Put back the veil of your golden hair, 
And let me look in your face once more. 

Ah ! it is you ; with that brow of truth. 
Ever too pure for the least disguise ; 

With the same dear smile on the loving mouth, 
And the same sweet light in the tender eyes. 

You are my own, my darling still. 

So do not vanish or turn aside, 
Wait till my eyes have had their fill, — 

AVait till my heart is pacified I 

You have left the light of your higher place, 
And ever thoughtful, and kind, and good, 

You come with your old familiar flice. 

And' not with the look of your angel-hood. 



BORDER-LAND. 171 

Still the touch of your hand is soft and light, 
And your voice is gentle, and kind, and low, 

And the very roses you wear to-night, 
You wore in the summers long ago. 

O world, you may tell me I dream or rave. 
So long as my darling comes to prove 

That the feet of the spirit cross the grave, 
And the loving live, and the living love ! 




PASSING FEET. 

All these hours she sits and counts, 
As they pass her slow and sad, 

Are the headsmen cutting off 
Every flower of hope she had ; 

And the feet that come and go 
In the darkness past her door, 

If they trod upon her heart. 
Could not pain it any more. 

Friends hastening now to friends, 
Faster as the night grows late ; 

Through all places men can o-q, 
To all homes where women wait. 

Some are pressing through the wood 
Where the path is faint and new ; 

Some strike out a shorter way, 
Across meadows wet with dew. 

Some, along the highway's track. 
Music to their foosteps keep ; 

Some are pushing into port. 
From their exile on the deep. 



PASSIXG FEET. 173 

But the hope she had at eve 

From her wretched soul has fled ; 

For the lamp of love she lit 

Has burned useless, and is dead. 

So the feet that come and go, 
In the darkness past her door, 

If they trod upon her heart 
Could not pain it any morel 




^^M^ 



OUR HOMESTEAD. 

Our old brown homestead reared its walls 

From the wayside dust aloof, 
Wliere the apple-boughs could almost cast 

Their fruit upon its roof; 
And the cherry-tree so near it orew 

That when awake I 've lain 
In the lonesome nights, I 've heard the limbs. 

As they creaked against the pane ; 
And those orchard trees, oh those orchard trees ! 

I've seen my little brothers rocked 
In their tops by the summer breeze. 

The sweet-briar, under the window-sill. 

Which the early birds made glad. 
And the damask rose, by the garden-fence, 

Were all the flowers we had. 
I 've looked at many a flower since then, 

Exotics rich and rare, 
That to other eyes were lovelier 

But not to me so fair ; 
For those roses bright, oh those roses bright! 

I have twined them in my sister's locks, 
That are hid in the dust from sight. 



OUR HOMESTEAD. 175 

We had a well, a deep old well, 

Where the spring was never dry. 
And the cool drops down from the moss}^ stones 

Were falling constantly ; 
And there never was water half so sweet 

As the draught which filled my cup, 
Drawn up to the curb by the rude old sweep 

That my father's hand set up. 
And that deep old well, oh that deep old well ! 

I remember now the plashing sound 
Of the bucket as it fell. 

Our homestead had an ample hearth. 

Where at night we loved to meet ; 
There my mother's voice was always kind, 

And her smile was always sweet ; 
And there I 've sat on my father's knee. 

And watched his thoughtful brow, 
With my childish hand in his raven hair, — 

That hair is silver now ! 
But that broad hearth's light, oh that broad 
hearth's light ! 

And my father's look, and my mother's smile. 
They are in my heart to-night ! 



THE LADY JAQUELINE. 

" False and fickle, or fair and sweet, 

I care not for the rest, 
The lover that knelt last night at my feet 

Was the bravest and the best. 
Let them perish all, for their power has waned, 

And their glory waxed dim ; 
They were well enough while they lived and 
reigned, 

But never was one like him ! 
And never one from the past would I bring 

Again, and call him mine ; — 
The King is dead, long live the King ! " 

Said the Lady Jaqueline. 

" In the old, old days, when life was new, 

And the world upon me smiled, 
A pretty, dainty, lover I had, 

AVhom I loved with the heart of a child. 
When the buried sun of yesterday 

Comes back from the shadows dim. 
Then may his love return to me. 

And the love I had for him ! 
But since to-day hath a better thing 

To give, I '11 ne'er repine ; — 



THE LADY JAQUELINE. 177 

The King is dead^ long live the King ! " 
Said the Lady Jaqueline. 

" And yet it almost makes me weep, 

Ay ! weep, and cry, alas ! 
When I think of one who lies asleep 

Down under the quiet grass. 
For he loved me well, and I loved again, 

And low in homage bent, 
And prayed for his long and prosperous reign, 

In our realm of sweet content. 
But not to the dead may the living cling. 

Nor kneel at an empty shrine ; — 
The King is dead, long live the King ! " 

Said the Lady Jaqueline. 

" Once, caught by the sheen of stars and lace, 

I bowed for a single day. 
To a poor pretender, mean and base, 

Unfit for place or sway. 
That must have been the work of a spell, 

For the foolish glamour fled, 
As the sceptre from his weak hand fell 

And the crown from his feeble head ; 
But homage true at last I bring 

To this rightful lord of mine, — 
The King is dead^ long live the King ! " 

Said the Lady Jaqueline. 
12 



178 TRE LADY JAQUELINE. 

'• By the hand of one I held most dear, 

And called my liege, my own ! 
I was set aside in a single year, 

And a new queen shares his throne. 
To him w^ho is false, and him who is wed, 

Shall I give my fealty ? 
Nay, the dead one is not half so dead 

As the false one is to me ! 
INIy faith to the faithful now I bring, 

The faithless I resign ; — 
TIte King is dead, long live the King ! " 

Said the Lady Jaqueline. 

Yea, all my lovers and kings that were 

Are dead, and hid away, 
In the past, as in a sepulchre, 

Shut up till the judgment day. 
False or fickle, or weak or wed, 

They are all alike to me ; 
And mine eyes no more can be misled, — 

They have looked on royalty ! 
Then bring me wine, and garlands bring 

For my king of the right divine ; — 
The King is dead, long live the King!*' 

Said the Lady Jaqueline. 



LOVE'S RECOMPENSE. 

Her heart was light as human heart can be, 
When blushingly she listened to the praise 
Of him who talked of love in those sweet days 

When first she kept a lover's company. 

That was hope's spring-time ; now its flowers are 
dead, 
And she, grown tired of life before its close, 
Weaves melancholy stories out of woes. 

Across whose dismal threads her heart has bled. 

Yet even for such we need not quite despair. 
Since from our wrong God can bring forth 

His right ; 
And He, though all are precious in His sight, 

Doth give the uncared-for His peculiar care. 

So, in the good life that shall follow this. 
He, being love, may make her love to be 
One golden thread, spun out eternally. 

Through her white fingers, trembling with their 
bliss. 



VAIN REPENTANCE. 

Do we not say, forgive us, Lord, 
Oft when too well we understand 

Our sorrow is not such as Thou 
Requirest at the sinner's hand? 

Have we not sought Thy face in tears, 
When our desire hath rather been, 

Deliverance from the punishment. 
Than full deliverance from the sin ? 

Alas! we mourn because we fain 

Would keep the things we should resign; 

And pray, because we cannot pray, — 
Not my rebeUious will, but Thine ! 



IN EXTREMITY. 

Think on him, Lord ! we ask Thy aid 
In life's most dread extremity ; 

For evil days have come to him, 
Who in his youth remembered Thee. 

Look on him, Lord ! for heart and flesh, 
Alike, must fail without Thy grace ; 

Part back the clouds, that he may see 
The brightness of his Father's face. 

Speak to him, Lord ! as Thou didst talk 
To Adam, in the Garden's shade, 

And grant it unto him to hear 
Thy voice, and not to be afraid. 

Support him, Lord ! that he may come, 
Leaning on Thee, in faith sublime, 

Up to that awful landmark, set. 
Between eternity and time. 

And, Lord ! if it must be that we 
Shall walk with him no more below. 

Reach out of heaven Thy loving hand, 
And lead him where we cannot go. 



THE LAST BED. 

'T WAS a lonesome couch we came to spread 
For her, when her little life was o'er, 

And a narrower one than any bed 
Whereon she had ever slept before. 

And we feared that she could not slumber so, 
As we stood about her when all was done, 

For the pillow seemed too hard and low 
For her precious head to rest upon. 

But, when we had followed her two by two, 
And lowered her down there where she lies. 

There was nothing left for us to do, 

But to hide it all from our tearful eyes. 

So we softly and tenderly spread between 
Our face and the face our love regrets, 

A covering, woven of leafy green. 
And spotted over with violets. 



JEALOUSY. 

I LOVE my love so well, I would 
There were no eyes but mine that could 
See my sweet piece of womanhood, 
And marvel of delight. 

I dread that even the sun should rise ; 
That bold, bright rover of the skies. 
Who dares to touch her closed eyes, 
And put her dreams to flight. 

No maid could be more kind to me, 
No truer maiden lives than she, 
But yet I die of jealousy, 

A thousand deaths in one. 

I cannot bear to see her stop. 

With her soft hand a flower to crop ; 

I envy even the clover-top 

Her dear foot treads upon. 

How cruel in my sight to bless 
Even her bird with the caress 
Of fingers that I dare not press, — 
Those lady fingers, white"; 



184 JEALOUSY. 

That nestle oft in that dear place 
Between her pillow and her face, 
And, never asking leave or grace. 
Caress her cheek at night ! 

'Tis torture more than I can bear 
To see the wanton summer air 
Lift the bright tresses of her hair, 
And careless let them fall. 

The wind that through the roses slips. 
And every sparkling dew-drop sips. 
Without rebuke may kiss her lips, 
The sweetest rose of all. 

I envy, on her neck of snow. 
The white pearls hanging in a row, 
The opals on her heart that glow, 
Flushed with a tender red. 

I would not, in her chamber fair, 
The curious stars should see her, where 
I, even in thought, may scarcely dare 
For reverence to tread. 

O maiden, hear and answer me 
In kindness or in cruelty ; 
Tell me to live, or let me die, 
I cry, and cry again ! 



JEALOUSY. 



185 



Give me to touch one golden tress, 

Give me thy white hand to caress, 

Give me thy red, red lips to press, 

And ease my jealous pain ! 




SPRING AFTER THE WAR. 

Come, loveliest season of the year, 
And every quickened pulse shall beat, 

Your footsteps in the grass to hear. 
And feel your kisses, soft and sweet ! 

Come, and bestow new happiness 
Upon the heart that hopeful thrills ; 

Sing Avith the lips that sing for bliss, 
And laugh with children on the hills. 

Lead dancing streams through meadows green. 

And in the deep, deserted dells 
"Where poets love to walk unseen. 

Plant flowers, with all delicious smells. 

To humble cabins kindly go. 

And train your shady vines, to creep 

About the porches, cool and low. 

Where mothers rock their babes to sleep. 

But come with hushed and reverent tread. 
And bring your gifts, most pure and sweet, 

To hallowed places where our dead 
Are sleeping underneath your feet. 



SPRING AFTER THE WAR. 187 

There let the turf be lightly pressed, 
And be your tears that softly flow 

The sweetest, and the sacredest. 
That ever pity shed for woe ! 

Scatter your holiest drop of dew, 

Sing hymns of sacred melody ; 
And keep your choicest flowers to strew 

The places where our heroes lie. 

But most of all, go watch about 

The unknown beds of such as sleep, 

"Where love can never find them out, 
Nor faithful friendship come to weep. 

Go where the ocean moans and cries, 
For those her waters hide from sight ; 

And where the billows heave and rise. 
Scatter the flowery foam-wreaths, white. 

Ay, all your dearest treasures keep ; 

We shall not miss them, but instead 
Will give them joyfully, to heap 

The holy altars of our dead ! 

The poet from his wood-paths, wild, 
I know will take his sweetest flower. 

The mother, singing to her child, 

Will strip the green vines from her bower; 



188 SPRING AFTER THE WAR. 

The poor man from his garden bed 
The unpretending blooms will spare 

The lover give the roses red 

He gathered for his darling's hair. 

Yea, all thy gifts we love and prize 
We ask thee reverently to bring, 

And lay thetn on the darkened eyes, 
That wait their everlasting spring ! 




THE WIFE'S CHRISTMAS. 

How can you speak to me so, Charlie ! 

It isn't kind, nor right; 
You would n't have talked a year ago, 

As you have done to-night. 

You are sorry to see me sit and cry, 

Like a baby vexed, you say; 
When you didn't know I wanted a gift. 

Nor think about the day ! 

But I 'm not like a baby, Charlie, 

Crying for something fine ; 
Only a loving woman pained. 

Could shed such tears as mine. 

For every Christmas time till now — 

And that is why I grieve — 
It was you that wanted to give, Charlie, 

More than I to receive. 

And all I ever had from you 

I have carefully laid aside ; 
From the first June rose you pulled for me, 

To the veil I wore as a bride. 



190 THE WIFE'S CHRISTMAS. 

And I wouldn't have cared to-night, Charlie, 

How poor the gift or small ; 
If you only had brought me something to show 

That you thought of me at all. 

The merest trifle of any kind, 

That I could keep or wear; 
A flimsy bit of lace for my neck, 

Or a ribbon for my hair. 

Some pretty story of lovers true, 

Or a book of pleasant rhyme ; 
A flower, or a holly branch, to mark 

The blessed Christmas time. 

But to be forgotten, Charlie ! 

'Tis that that brings the tear; 
And just to think, that I have n't been 

Your wife but a single year ! 



WOOED AND WON. 

The maiden has listened to loving words. 

She has seen a heart like a flower unclose ; 
And yet she would almost hide its truth, 

And shut the leaves of the blushing rose. 

For the spell of enchantment is broken now, 
And all the future is seen so clear, 

That she longs for the very longing gone, 
For the restless pleasure of hope and fear. 

She stands so close to her painting now 
That its smallest failings are revealed, — 

Ah, that beautiful picture, that looked so sweet, 
By the misty distance half concealed ! 

" Alas," she says, " can it then be true 
That all is vanity, as they preach, — 

That the good is in striving after the good, 
And the best is the thing we never roach ? 

" Are not the sweetest words we can speak : 
' It is mine, and I hold my treasure fiist ? ' 

And the saddest wrung from the human heart : 
' It might have been, but the time is past ? ' 



192 



WOOED AND WON. 



"I do not know, and I will not say, 
But yet of a truth it seems to me, 

I would give my certain knowledge back, 
For my hope, with its sweet uncertainty ! 




SONG. 

I SEE him part the careless throng, 

I catch his eager eye ; 
He hurries towards me where I wait, 

Beat high, my heart, beat high ! 

I feel the glow upon my cheek. 

And all my pulses thrill ; 
He sees me, passes careless by ; — 

Be still, my heart, be still ! 

He takes another hand than mine. 

It trembles for his sake; 
I see his joy, I feel my doom ; — 

Break, O my heart-strings, break I 



13 



MY RICHES. 

There is no comfort in the world 
But I, in thought, have known ; 

No bliss for any human heart, 
I have not dreamed my own ; 

And fancied joys may sometimes be 

More real than reality. 

I have a house in which to live, 

Pleasant, and fair, and good, 
Its hearth is crowned with warmth and Ught, 

Its board with daintiest food. 
And I, when tired with care or doubt, 
Co in and shut my sorrows out. 

I have a father, one whose care 

Goes with me where I roam; 
A mother, waiting anxiously 

To see her child come home ; 
And sisters, from whose tender eyes 
The love in mine hath sweet replies. 

I have a friend, who sees in me 
What none beside can see, 



MY RICHES. 195 

Not faultless, but as firm and true, 

And pure, as man may be ; 
A friend, whose love is never dim, 
And I can never change to him. 

My boys are very gentle boys, 

And after they are grown. 
They 're nobler, better, braver men 

Than any I have known ! 
And all my girls are fair and good 
From infancy to womanhood. 

So with few blessings in the world 

That men can see or name, 
Home, love, and all that love can bring 

My mind has power to claim ; 
And life can never cease to be 
A good and pleasant thing to me. 




THE BOOK OF NATURE. 

We scarce could doubt our Father's power, 
Though his greatness were untold 

In the sacred record made for us 
By the prophet-bards of old. 

We must have felt his watchfulness 

About us everywhere ; 
Though we had not learned, in the Holy Word, 

How he keeps us in his care. 

I almost think we should know his love, 
And dream of his pardoning grace. 

If we never had read how the Sanour came, 
To die for a sinful race. 

For the sweetest parables of truth 

In our daily pathway lie. 
And we read, without interpreter, 

The writing on the sky. 

The ravens, fed when they clamor, teach 

The human heart to trust ; 
And the rain of goodness speaks, as it falls 

On the unjust and the just. 



TEE BOOK OF NATURE. 197 

The sunshine drops, like a leaf of gold, 
From the book of light above ; 

And the lily's missal is written full 
Of the words of a Father's love. 

So, when we turn from the sacred page 

Where the holy record lies. 
And its gracious plans and promises 

Are hidden from our eyes ; 

One open volume still is ours, 

To read and understand; 
And its living characters are writ 

By our Father's loving hand ! 




I CANNOT TELL. 

Once, being charmed by thy smile, 
And listening to thy praises, such 

As women, hearing all the while, 

I think could never hear too much, — 

I had a pleasing fantasy 

Of souls that meet, and meeting blend, 
And hearing that same dream from thee. 

I said I loved thee, O my friend ! 

That was the flood-tide of my youth. 
And now its calm waves backward flow 

I cannot tell if it were truth. 
If what I feel be love or no. 

My days and nights pass pleasantly, 
Serenely on my seasons glide, 

And though I think and dream of thee, 
I dream of many things beside. 

Most eagerly thy praise is sought, 
'T is sweet to meet, and sad to part ; 

But all my best and deepest thought 
Is hidden from thee in my heart. 



I CANNOT TELL. 



199 



And still the while a charm or spell, 
Half holds, and will not let me go ; 

'T is strange, and yet I cannot tell 
If what I feel be love, or no ! 




DEAD LOVE. 

We are face to face, and between us here 
Is the love we thought could never die ; 

Why has it only lived a year? 

Who has murdered it — you or I? 

No matter who — the deed was done 
By one or both, and there it lies ; 

The smile from the lip forever gone, 
And darkness over the beautiful eyes. 

Our love is dead, and our hope is wrecked; 

So what does it profit to talk and rave. 
Whether it perished by my neglect, 

Or whether your cruelty dug its grave! 

Why should you say that I am to blame, 
Or why should I charge the sin on you ? 

Our work is before us all the same. 

And the guilt of it lies between us two. 

We have praised our love for its beauty and 
grace ; 
Now we stand here, and hardly dare 



DEAD LOVE. 201 

To turn the face-cloth back from the face, 
And see the thing that is hidden there. 

Yet look ! ah, that heart has beat its last, 
And the beautiful life of our life is o'er, 

And when we have buried and left the past. 
We two, together, can walk no more. 

You might stretch yourself on the dead, and 
weep. 

And pray as the Prophet prayed, in pain ; 
But not like him could you break the sleep, 

And bring the soul to the clay again. 

Its head in my bosom I can lay. 

And shower my woe there, kiss on kiss, 

But there never was resurrection-day 
In the world for a love so dead as this ! 

And, since we cannot lessen the sin 
By mourning over the deed we did, 

Let us draw the winding-sheet up to the chin, 
Ay, up till the death-blind eyes are hid ! 



FIGS OF THISTLES. 

As laborers set in a \ineyard 

Are we set in life's field, 
To plant and to garner the harvest 

Our future shall yield. 

And never since harvests were ripened, 

Or laborers bom, 
Have men gathered figs of the thistle, 

Or grapes of the thorn ! 

Even he who has faithfully scattered 

Clean seed in the ground, 
Has seen, where the green blade was growing, 

Tares of evil abound. 

Our labor ends not with the planting. 

Sure watch must we keep. 
For the enemy sows in the night-time 

While husbandmen sleep. 

And sins, all unsought and unbidden. 

Take root in the mind ; 
As the weeds grow, to choke up the blossoms, 

Chance-sown by the wind. 



FIGS OF THISTLES. 203 

But no good crop, our hands never planted, 

Doth Providence send ; 
Nor doth that which we planted have increase 

Till we water and tend. 

By our fruits, whether good, whether evil, 

At last are we shown ; 
And he who has nothing to gather. 

By his lack shall be known. 

And no useless creature escapeth 

His righteous reward ; 
For the tree or the soul that is barren 

Is cursed of the Lord ! 




COMING ROUND. 

'T IS all right, as I knew it would be by and by ; 
"VVe have kissed and made up again, Archie 

and I ; 
And that quarrel, or nonsense, whatever you will, 
I think makes us love more devotedly still. 

The trouble was all upon my side, you know ; 
I 'm exacting sometimes, rather foolishly so ; 
And let any one tell me the veriest lie 
About Archie, I 'm sure to get angry and cry. 

Things will go on between us again just the 

same, — 
For as he explains matters he was n't to blame ; 
But 't is useless to tell you ; I can't make you see 
How it was, quite as plainly as he has made me. 

You thought "I would make him come round 

when we met I " 
You thought " there were slights I could never 

forget ! " 
Oh you did ! let me tell you, my dear, to 

your face. 
That your thinking these things does n't alter 

the case ! 



COMING ROUND. 205 

You " can tell what I said ? " I don't wish you 

to tell! 
You know what a temper I have, very well ; 
That I 'm sometimes unjust to my friends who 

are best ; 
But you 've turned against Archie the same as 

the rest ! 

"Why hasn't he written? what kept him so 

still ? " — 
His silence was sorely against his own will ; 
He has faults, that I own ; but he, he would n't 

deceive ; 
He was ill, or was busy, — was both, I believe ! 

Did he flirt with that lady'^ I s'pose I should 

say, 
Why, yes, — when she threw herself right in 

the way ; 
He was led off, was foolish, but that is the 

worst, — 
And she was to blame for it all, from the first. 

And he 's so glad to come back again, and to 

find 
A woman once more with a heart and a mind ; 
For though others may please and amuse for 

an hour, 
I hold all his future — his life — in my power ! 



206 COMING ROUND. 

And now, if things don't go persistently wrong, 

Our destinies cannot be parted for long; 

For he said he would give me his fortune and 

name, — 
Not those words, but he told me what meant 

just the same. 

So what could I do, after all, at the last, 
But just ask him to pardon my doubts in the 

past ; 
For though he had been wrong, I should still, 

all the same, 
Rather take it myself than let him bear the 

blame. 

And, poor fellow ! he felt so bad, I could not 

bear 
To drive him by cruelty quite to despair; 
And so, to confess the whole truth, when I 

found 
He was willing to do so himself, /came round ! 



PECCAVI. 

I HAVE sinned, I have sinned, before thee, the 
Most Holy! 

And I come as a penitent, bowing down lowly, 

With my lips making freely their awful admis- 
sion, 

And mine eyes raining bitterest tears of con- 
trition ; 

And I cry^ unto thee, with my mouth in the 
dust: 

God I be not just ! 

God ! be not just ; but be merciful rather, — 
Let me see not the face of my Judge but my 

Father : 
A sinner, a culprit, I stand self-convicted, 
Yet the pardoning power is thine unrestricted ; 

1 am weak ; thou art strong ; in thy goodness 

and might, 

Let my sentence be light ! 

I have turned from all gifts which thy kindness 

supplied me, 
Because of the one which thy wisdom denied 

me ; 



208 PECCAVI. 

I have bandaged mine eyes — yea, mine own 

hands have bound me ; 
I have made me a darkness, when light was 

around me ; 
And I cry by the wayside: O Lord! that I 

might 

Receive back my sight! 

For the sake of my guilt, may my guilt be 

forgiven, 
And because mine iniquities mount unto heaven • 
Let my sins, which are crimson, be snow in 

their brightness ; 
Let my sins, which are scarlet, be wool in their 

whiteness. 
I am out of the way, and my soul is dismayed — 
I am lost, and afraid. 

I have sinned, and against Him whose justice 

may doom me ; 
Insulted His power whose wrath can consume 

me ; 
Yet, by that blest name by which angels adore 

Ilim — 
That name through which mortals may dare 

come before Him — 
I come, saying only, My Father above, 
My God, be thou Love! 



OTWAY. 

Poet, whose lays our memory still 
Back from the past is bringing, 

Whose sweetest songs were in thy life 
And never in thy singing ; 

For chords thy hand had scarcely touched 
By death were rudely broken, 

And poems, trembling on thy lip, 
Alas ! were never spoken. 

"We say thy words of hope and cheer 
When hope of ours would languish, 

And keep them always in our hearts 
For comfort in our anguish. 

Yet not for thee we mourn as those 

Who feel by God forsaken ; 
We would rejoice that thou wert lent, 

Nor weep that thou wert taken. 

For thou didst lead us up from earth 

To walk in fields elysian, 
And show to us the heavenly shore 

In many a raptured vision. 

14 . 



210 OTWAY. 

Thy faith was strong from earth's last trial 

The spirit to deliver, 
And throw a golden bridge across 

Death's dark and silent river ; 

A bridge, where fearless thou didst pass 

The stern and awful warder, 
And enter with triumphant songs 

Upon the heavenly border. 

Oh for a harp like thine to sing 
The songs that are immortal ; 

Oh for a faith like thine to cross 
The everlasting portal ! 

Then might we tell to all the world 
Redemption's wondrous story; 

Go down to death as thou didst go, 
And up from death to glory. 



IMPATIENCE. 

Will the mocking daylight never be done? 

Is the moon her hour forgetting ? 
O weary sun ! U merciless sun ! 

You have grown so slow in setting ! 

And yet, if the days could come and go 

As fast as I count them over, 
They would seem to me like years, I know, 

Till they brought me back my lover. 

Down through the valleys, down to the south, 

O west wind, go with fleetness, 
Kiss, with your daintiest kisses, his mouth, 

And bring to me all its sweetness. 

Go when he lieth in slumber deep, 

And put your arms about him. 
And hear if he whisper my name in his sleep, 

And tell him, I die without him. 

O birds, that sail in the air like ships, 

To me such discord bringing. 
If you heard the sound of my lover's lips, 

You would be ashamed of your singing ! 



212 IMPATIEXCE. 

rose, from whose heart such a crimson rain 

Up to your soft cheek gushes, 
You never could show your face again, 

If you saw my lover's blushes ! 



hateful stars, in hateful skies, 
Can you think your light is tender. 

When you steal it all from my lover's eyes. 
And shine with a borrowed splendor? 

sun, going over the western wall. 
If you stay there none will heed you ; 

For why should you rise or shine at all 
When he is not here to need you? 

Will the mocking daylight never be done? 

Is the moon her hour forgetting? 
weary sun ! O merciless sun ! 

You have grown so slow in setting! 



THE LAMP ON THE PRAIEIE. 

The grass lies flat beneath the wind 
That is loosed in its angry might, 

Where a man is wandering, faint and blind, 
On the prairie, lost at night. 

No soft, sweet light of moon or star. 
No sound but the tempest's tramp ; 

When suddenly he sees afar 
The flame of a friendly lamp ! 

And hope revives his failing strength. 

He struggles on, succeeds, — 
He nears a humble roof at length. 

And loud for its shelter pleads. 

And a voice replies, " Whoever you be 
That knock so loud at my door. 

Come in, come in ! and bide with me 
Till this dreadful storm is o'er. 

" And no wilder, fiercer time in March 
Have I seen since I was born ; 



214 THE LAMP ON THE PRAIRIE. 

If a wolf for shelter sought my porch 
To-night, he might lie till morn." 

As he enters, there meets the stranger's gaze 

One bowed by many a year, — 
A woman, alone by the hearth's bright blaze. 

Tending her lamp anear. 

" Right glad will I come," he said, "for the 
sweep 

Of the wind is keen and strong ; 
But tell me, good neighbor, why you keep 

Your fire ablaze so long? 

" You dwell so far from the beaten way 
It might burn for many a night ; 

And only belated men, astray, 
Would ever see the light." 

" Ay, ay, 't is true as you have said, 

But few this way have crossed ; 
But w^hy should not fires be lit and fed 

For the sake of men who are lost ? 

" There are women enough to smile when they 
come. 

Enough to watch and pray 
For those who never were lost from home, 

And never were out of the way. 



THE LAMP ON TEE PRAIRIE, 215 

" And hard it were if there were not some 

To love and welcome back 
The poor misguided souls who have gone 

Aside from the beaten track. 

" And if a clear and steady light 

In my home had always shone, 
My own good boy had sat to-night 

By the hearth, where I sit alone. 

" But alas ! there was no faintest spark 
The night when he should have come ; 

And what had he, when the pane was dark. 
To guide his footsteps home ? 

" But since, each night that comes and goes, 

My beacon fires I burn ; 
For no one knows but he lives, nor knows 

The time w^hen he may return ! " 

"And a lonesome life you must have had. 
Good neighbor, but tell me, pray, 

How old when he went was your little lad ? 
And how long has he been away ? " 

" 'T is thirty years, by my reckoning. 
Since he sat here last with me ; 

And he was but twenty in the spring, — 
He was only a boy, you see ! 



216 THE LAMP ON THE PRAIRIE. 

" And though never yet has my fire been low, 
Nor my lamp in the window dim, 

It seems not long to be waiting so, 
Nor much to do for him ! 

'' And if mine eyes may see the lad 
But in death, 't is enough of joy ; 

Wliat mother on earth would not be glad 
To wait for such a boy ! 

" You think 't is long to watch at home, 

Talking with fear and doubt ; 
But long is the time that a son may roam 

Ere he tire his mother out ! 

" And if you had seen my good boy go, 

As I saw him go from home, 
With a promise to come at night, you would 
know 

That, some good night, he would come." 

" But suppose he perished where never pass 
E'en the feet of the hunter bold, 

His bones might bleach in the prairie grass 
Unseen till the world is old ! " 

" Ay, he might have died : you answer well 

And truely, friend, he might ; 
And this good old earth on which we dwell 

Might come to an end to-night ! 



THE LAMP ON THE PRAIRIE. 217 

" But I know that here in its place, instead, 

It will firm and fast remain ; 
And I know that my son, alive or dead, 

Will return to me again ! 

" So your idle fancies have no power 

To move me or appall ; 
He is likelier now to come in an hour 

Than never to come at all ! 

" And he shall find me watching yet. 

Return whenever he may ; 
My house has been in order set 

For his coming many a day. 

"You were rightly shamed if his young feet 
crossed 

That threshold stone to-night, 
For your foolish words, that he might be lost, 

And his bones be hid from sight ! 

" And oh, if I heard his light step fall, 

K I saw him at night or morn 
Far off, I should know my son from all 

The sons that ever were born. 

*' And, hark ! there is something strange about, 
For my dull old blood is stirred ; 

That was n't the feet of the storm without, 
Nor the voice of the storm I heard! 



218 THE LAMP ON THE PRAIRIE. 

" It was but the wind ! nay, friend, be still, 
Do you think that the night wind's breath 

Through my very soul could send a thrill 
Like the blast of the angel, Death ? 

" 'T is my boy ! he is coming home, he is near, 

Or I could not hear him pass ; 
For his step is as light as the step of the ?leer 

On the velvet prairie grass. 

" How the tempest roars ! how my cabin rocks ! 

Yet I hear him through the din ; 
Lo ! he stands without the door — he knocks — 

I must rise and let him in ! " 

She rose — she stood erect, serene ; 

She swiftly crossed the floor ; 
And the hand of tlie wind, or a hand unseen, 

Threw open wide the door. 

Through the portal rushed the cruel blast, 

With a wail on its awful swell ; 
As she cried, "My boy, you have come at last! " 

And prone o'er the threshold fell. 

And the stranger heard no other sound, 

And saw no form appear ; 
But whoever came at the midnight found 

Her lamp was burning clear ! 



COMPENSATION. 

Crooked and dwarfed the tree must stay, 
Nor lift its green head to the day, 
Till useless growths are lopped away, 

And thus doth human nature do ; 

Till it hath careful pruning, too, 

It cannot grow up straight and true. 

For, but for chasten ings severe. 
No soul could ever tell how near 
God comes, to whom He loveth, here. 

Without life's ills, we could not feel 
The blessed change from woe to weal ; 
Only the wounded limb can heal. 

The sick and suffering learn below. 
That which the whole can never know, 
Of the soft hand that soothes their woe. 

And never man is blest as he. 
Who, freed from some infirmity. 
Rejoices in his liberty. 



220 C OMP EXSA TIOiV. 

He sees, with new and glad surprise, 
The world that round about him lies, 
Who slips the bondage from his eyes ; 

And comes from where he long hath lain, 
Comes from the darkness and the pain, 
Out into God's full ligrht again. 

They only know who wait in fear 
The music of a footstep near, 
Falling upon the listening ear. 

And life's great depths are soonest stirred 
In him who hath but seldom heard 
The magic of a loving word. 

Joy after grief is more complete ; 
And kisses never fall so sweet 
As when long-parted lovers meet 

One who is little used to such, 
Surely can tell us best how much 
There is in a kind smile or touch. 

*Tis like the spring wind from the south, 
Or water to the fevered mouth, 
Or sweet rain falling after drouth. 



C OMP EXSA TI ON. 221 

By him the deepest rest is won 
"^ho toils beneath the noonday sun 
Faithful until his work is done. 

And watchers through the weary night 
Have learned how pleasantly the light 
Of morning breaks upon the sight. 

Perchance the jewel seems most fair 
To him whose patient toil and care 
Has brought it to the upper air. 

And other lips can never taste 

A draught like that he finds at last 

Who seeks it in the burning waste. 

When to the mother's arms is lent, 
That sweet reward for suffering sent 
To her, from the Omnipotent, 

I think its helpless, pleading cry 
Touches her heart more tenderly, 
Because of her past agony. 

We learn at last how good and brave 
Was the dear friend we could not save, 
When he has slipped into the grave. 



222 COMPENSATION. 

And after He has come to hide 

Our lambs upon the other side, 

We know our Shepherd and our Guide. 

And thus, by ways not understood, 
Out of each dark vicissitude, 
God brings us compensating good. 

For Faith is perfected by fears. 

And souls renew their youth with years, 

And Love looks into heaven through tears. 




OUR GOOD PRESIDENT. 

Our sun hath gone down at the noonday, 

The heavens are black ; 
And over the morning, the shadows 

Of night-time are back. 

Stop the proud boasting mouth of the cannon ; 

Hush the mirth and the shout ; — 
God is God ! and the ways of Jehovah 

Are past finding out. 

Lo ! the beautiful feet on the mountains, 

That yesterday stood, 
The white feet that came with glad tidings 

Are dabbled in blood. 

The Nation that firmly was settling 

The crown on her head, 
Sits like Rizpah, in sackcloth and asnes. 

And watches her dead. 

Who is dead ? who, unmoved by our wailing, 

Is lying so low ? 
Oh my Land, stricken dumb in your anguish, 

Do you feel, do you know, 



224 OUR GOOD PRESIDENT. 

That the hand which reached out of the darkness 

Hath taken the whole ; 
Yea, the arm and the head of the people, — 

The heart and the soul ? 

And that heart, o'er whose dread awful silence 

A nation has wept ; 
Was the truest, and gentlest, and sweetest, 

A man ever kept. 

Why, he heard from the dungeons, the rice-fields, 

The dark holds of ships 
Every faint, feeble cry which oppression 

Smothered down on men's lips. 

In her furnace, the centuries had welded 

Their fetter and chain ; 
And like withes, in the hands of his purpose. 

He snapped them in twain. 

Who can be what he was to the people, — 

What he was to the state ? 
Shall the ages bring to us another 

As good and as great? 

Our hearts with their anguish are broken. 

Our wet eves are dim ; 
For us is the loss and the sorrow, 

The triumph for him ! 



OUR GOOD PRESIDENT. 



225 



For, ere this, face to face with his Father 

Our martyr hath stood; 
Giving into His hand a white record, 

With its great seal of blood ! 



15 




CHRISTMAS. 

Ti^EE by holy prophets long foretold, 
Time waited for by saints in days of old, 
O sweet, auspicious morn 
When Christ, the Lord, was born ! 

Again the fixed changes of the year 
Have brought that season to the worid most 
dear. 
When angels, all aflame. 
Bringing good tidings came. 

Again we think of her, the meek, the mild, 
The dove-eyed mother of the holy child. 

The chosen, and the best, 

Among all women blest. 

We think about the shepherds, who, dismayed, 
Fell on their faces, trembling and afraid, 

Until they heard the cry, 

Glory to God on high ! 

And we remember those who from afar 
Followed the changing glory of the star 

To where its light was shed 

Upon the sacred head ; 



CHRISTMAS. 227 

And how each trembling, awe-struck worshiper, 
Brought gifts of gold, and frankincense, and 
myrrh, 

And spread them on the ground 

In reverence profound. 

We think what joy it would have been to share 
In their high privilege who came to bear 

Sweet spice and costly gem 

To Christ, in Bethlehem. 

And in that thought we half forget that He 
Is wheresoe'er we seek him earnestly; 
Still filling every place 
With sweet, abounding grace. 

And though in garments of the flesh, as then. 
No more he walks this sinful earth with men. 

The poor, to him most dear. 

Are always with us here. 

And He saith, Inasmuch as ye shall take 
Good to these little ones for my dear sake. 

In that same measure ye 

Have brought it unto Me ! 

Therefore, O men in prosperous homes who live. 
Having all blessings earthly wealth can give, 
Eemember their sad doom 
For whom there is no room — 



228 CHRISTMAS. 

No room in any home, in any bed, 

No soft white pillow waiting for the head, 

And spare from treasures great 

To help their low estate. 

Mothers whose sous fill all your homes w4th 

light, 
Think of the sons who once made homes as 
bright, 
Now laid in sleep profound 
On some sad battle-ground ; 

And into darkened dwellings come with cheer, 
With pitying hand to wipe the falling tear, 

Comfort for Christ's dear sake 

To childless mothers take ! 

Children whose lives are blest with love untold, 
"Whose gifts are greater than your arms can hold. 

Think of the child who stands 

To-day with empty hands ! 

Go fill them up, and you will also fill 
Their empty hearts, that lie so cold and still. 
And brighten longing eyes 
With grateful, glad surprise. 

May all who have, at this blest season seek 
His precious little ones, the poor and weak. 



CHRISTMAS. 229 

In joyful, sweet accord, 
Thus lending to the Lord. 

Yea, Crucified Redeemer, who didst give 
Thy toil, thy tears, thy life, that we might live, 
Thy Spirit grant, that we 
May live one day for Thee ! 




SUGAR^MAKING. 

The crocus rose from her snowy bed 
As she felt the Spring's caresses, 

And the willow from her graceful head 
Shook out her yellow tresses. 

Through the crumbling walls of his icy cell 
Stole the brook, a happy rover ; 

And he made a noise like a silver bell 
In running under and over. 

The earth was pushing the old dead grass 
With lily hand from her bosom, 

A.nd the sweet brown buds of the sassafras 
Could scarcely hide the blossom 

And breaking Nature's solitude 

Came the axe strokes clearly ringing. 

For the chopper was busy in the wood 
Ere the early birds were singing. 

All day the hardy settler now 
At his tasks was toiling steady ; 

tlis fields were cleared, and his shining plow 
Was set by the furrow ready. 



suGar-makixg. 231 

And down in the woods, where the sun appeared 
Through the naked branches breaking, 

His rustic cabin had been reared 
For the time of sugar-making. 

And now, as about it he came and went, 

Cheerfully planning and toiling, 
His good child sat there, with eyes intent 

On the fire and the kettles boiling. 

With the beauty Nature gave as her dower, 
And the artless grace she taught her, 

The woods could boast no fairer flower. 
Than Rose, the settler's daughter. 

She watched the pleasant fire anear, 
And her father coming and going, 

And her thoughts were all as sweet and clear 
As the drops his pail o'erflowing. 

For she scarce had dreamed of earthly ills, 

And love had never found her ; 
She lived shut in by the pleasant hills 

That stood as a guard around her; 

And she might have lived the self-same way 
Through all the springs to follow, 

But for a youth, who came one day 
Across her in the hollow. 



232 SUGAR-MAKING. 

He did not look like a wicked man, 
And yet, when he saw that blossom, 

He said, " I vdW steal this Ros6 if I can, 
And hide it in my bosom." 

That he could be tired you had not guessed 
Had you seen him lightly walking ; 

But he must have been, for he stopped to rest 
So long that they fell to talking. 

Alas ! he was athirst, he said, 

Yet he feared there was no slaking 

The deep and quenchless thirst he had 
For a draught beyond his taking. 

Then she filled the cup and gave to him. 

The settler's blushinij daughter. 
And he looked at her across the brim 

As he slowly drank the water. 

And he sighed as he put the cup away, 
For lips and soul were drinking ; 

But what he drew from her eyes that day 
Was the sweetest, to his thinking. 

I do not know if her love awoke 

Before his words awoke it ; 
If she guessed at his before he spoke, 

Or not until he spoke it 



SUGAR-MAKING. 



233 



But howsoe'er she made it known, 

And howsoe'er he told her, 
Each unto each the heart had shown 

When the year was little older. 

For oft he came her voice to hear, 
And to taste of the sugar-water ; 

And she was a settler's wife next year 
Who had been a settler's dauo-hter. 

o 

And now their days are fair and fleet 

As the days of sugar weather, 
While they drink the water, clear and sweet, 

Of the cup of life together. 




MY FRIEND. 

O MY friend, O my dearly beloved ! 

Do you feel, do you know, 
How the times and the seasons are going ; 

Are they weary and slow ? 
Does it seem to you long, in the heavens, 

My true, tender mate. 
Since here we were liN-ing together, 

Where dying I wait. 
'T is three years, as we co<int by the spring-times. 

By the birth of the flowers, 
What are years, aye ! eternities even, 

To love such as ours? 
Side by side are we still, though a shadow 

Between us doth fall ; 
We are parted, and yet are not parted. 

Not wholly, and all. 
For still you are round and about me. 

Almost in my reach. 
Though I miss the old pleasant communion 

Of smile and of speech. 
And I long to hear what you are seeing. 

And what you have done, 
Since the earth faded out from your vision. 

And the heavens begun ; 



MY FRIEND. 235 

Since you dropped off the darkening fillet 

Of clay from your sight, 
And opened your eyes upon glory 

Ineffably bright ! 
Though little my life has accomplished, 

My poor hands have wrought ; 
I have lived what has seemed to be ages 

In feeling and thought, 
Since the time when our path grew so narrow, 

So near the unknown, 
That I turned back from following after, 

And you went on alone. 
For we speak of you cheerfully, always, 

As journeying on ; 
Not as one who is dead do we name you; 

We say, you are gone. 
For how could we speak of you sadly. 

We, who watched while the grace 
Of eternity's wonderful beauty 

Grew over your face ! 

Do we call the star lost that is hidden 

In the great light of morn ? 
Or fashion a shroud for the young child 

In the day it is bom ? 
Yet behold this were wise to their folly. 

Who mourn, sore distressed. 
When a soul, that is summoned, believing. 

Enters into its rest! 



236 MY FRIEND 

And for you, never any more sweetly 

Went to rest, true and deep. 
Since the first of our Lord's blessed martyrs 

Having prayed, fell asleep. 

What to you was the change, the transition, 

When looking before. 
You felt that the places which knew you 

Should know you no more ? 
Did the soul rise exultant, ecstatic? 

Did it cry, all is well? 
What it was to the left and the lovdng 

We only can tell. 
'T was as if one took from us sweet roses 

And we caught their last breath ; 
'T was like any thing beautiful passing, — 

It was not like death! 
Like the flight of a bird, when still rising, 

And singing aloud. 
He goes towards the summer-time, over 

The top of the cloud. 
Now seen and now lost in the distance, 

Borne up and along, 
From the sight of the eyes that are watching 

On a trail of sweet song. 
As sometimes, in the midst of the blackness, 

A great shining spark 
Flames up from the wick of a candle. 

Blown out in the dark; 



JIY FRIEND. 237 

So while we were watching and waiting, 

'Twixt hoping and doubt, 
The h'ght of the soul flashed upon us, 

When we thought it gone out. 
And we scarce could believe it forever 

Withdrawn from our sight, 
When the cold lifeless ashes before us 

Fell silent and white ! 
Ah ! the strength of your love was so wondrous 

So great was its sway. 
It forced back the spirit half-parted 

Away from the clay ; 
In its dread of the great separation, 

For not then did we know. 
Love can never be left, beloved, 

And never can go ! 

As when from some beautiful casement 

Illumined at night, 
While we steadfastly gaze on its brightness, 

A hand takes the light ; 
And our eyes still transfixed by the splendor 

Look earnestly on, 
At the place where we lately beheld it. 

Even when it has gone : 
So we looked in your soul's darkening windows. 

Those luminous eyes. 
Till the light taken from them fell on us 

From out of the skies ! 



238 MY FRIEND. 

Though you wore something earthly about you 

That once we called you, 
A robe all transparent, and brightened 

By the soul shining through : 
Yet when you had dropped it in going, 

'T was but yours for a day, 
Safe back in the bosom of Nature 

We laid it away. 
Strewing over it odorous blossoms 

Their perfume to shed, 
But you never were buried beneath them, 

And never were dead ! 
What we brought there and left for the darkness 

Forever to hide. 
Was but precious because you had worn it, 

And put it aside. 
As a garment might be, you had fashioned 

In exquisite taste ; 
A book which your touch had made sacred, 

A flower you had graced. 
For all that was yours we hold precious, 

We keep for your sake 
Every relic our saint on her journey 

Has not needed to take. 

Who that knew what your spirit, though fettered, 

Aspired to. adored, 
When as far as the body would loose it 

It mounted and soared : 



MY FRTEND. 239 

What soul in the world that had loved you, 

Or known you aright, 
Would look for you down in the darkness, 

Not up in the light ? 
Why, the seed in the ground that we planted, 

And left there to die, 
Being quickened, breaks out of its prison. 

And grows towards the sky. 
The small fire that but slowly was kindled, 

And feebly begun. 
Gaining strength as it burns, flashes upward, 

And mounts to the sun. 
And could such a soul, free for ascending, 

Could that luminous spark. 
Blown to flame by the breath of Jehovah, 

Go out in the dark ? 
Doth the bird stay behind when the window 

Wide open is set? 
Or, freed from the snare of the fowler. 

Hasten back to his net? 
And you pined in the flesh, being burdened 

By its great weight of ills, 
As a slave, who has tasted wild freedom. 

Still pines for the hills. 
And therefore it is that I seek you 

In full, open day, 
Where the universe stretches the farthest 

From darkness away. 
And think of you always as rising 

And spurning the gloom ; 



240 MY FRIEND. 

All the width of infinity keeping 
'Twixt yourself and the tomb ! 

Sometimes in white raiment I see you, 

Treading higher and higher, 
On the great sea of glass, ever shining, 

And mingled with fire. 
With the crown and the harp of the victor. 

Exultant you stand ; 
And the melody drops, as if jewels 

Dropped off from your hand. 
You walk in that beautiful city. 

Adorned as a bride, 
Whose twelve gates of pearl are forever 

Opened freely and wide. 
Wliose walls upon jasper foundations 

Shall firmly endure ; 
Set with topaz, and beryl, and sapphire, 

And amethyst pure. 
You are where there is not any dying. 

Any pain, any cries ; 
And God's hand has wiped softly foreve, 

The tears from your eyes : 
For if spirits because of much loving 

Come nearest the throne. 
You must be with the saints and the children 

Our Lord calls his own ! 

Sometimes you are led in green pastures, 
The sweetest and best ; 



MY FRIEND. 241 

Sometimes as a lamb in the bosom 

Of Jesus you rest. 
Where you linger the spiciest odors 

Of paradise blow, 
And under your feet drifts of blossoms 

Lie soft as the snow. 
If you follow the life-giving river, 

Or rest on its bank, 
You are set round by troops of white lilies, 

In rank after rank. 
And the loveliest things, and the fairest, 

That near you are seen 
Seem as beautiful handmaids, who wait on 

The step of a queen. 
For always, wherever I see you, 

Below or above, 
I think all the good which surrounds you 

Is born of your love. 
And the best place is that where I find you, 

The best thing what you do; 
For you seem to have fashioned the heaven. 

That was fashioned for you ! 

But as from His essence and nature 

Our God, ever blest, 
Cannot do any thing for His children 

But that which is best ; 
And till He hath gathered them to Him, 

In the heavens above, 
16 



242 MY FRIEND. 

Cannot joy over them as one singing, 

Nor rest in His love ; 
So you, who have drawn from His goodness 

Your portion of good. 
Must help where your hand can be helpful, 

Cannot rest if you would ; 
For you could not be happy in heaven, 

By glory shut in. 
While any soul whom you might comfort 

Should suffer and sin. 
So unto the heirs of salvation 

Have you freely appeared ; 
And the earth by your sweet ministration 

Is brightened and cheered. 

I am sure you are near to the dying! 

For often we mark 
A smile on their faces, whose brightness 

Lights the soul through the dark ; 
Sure, that you have for man in his direst 

Necessity cared ; 
Preparing him then for whatever 

The Lord hath prepared. 
So, whenever you tenderly loosen 

A hand from our grasp, 
We feel, you can hold it and keep it 

More safe in your clasp ; 
And that he, whose dear smile for a season, 

Our love must resign. 



31 Y FRIEND. 243 

Gains the infinite comfort and sweetness 
Of love such as thine. 

Yea, lost mortal, immortal forever ! 

And saved evermore ! 
You revisit the world and the people. 

That saw you of yore. 
To the sorrowful house, to the death-room, 

The prison and tomb, 
You come, as on wings of the morning, 

To scatter the gloom. 
Wherever in desolate places 

Earth's misery abides ; 
Wherever in dark habitations 

Her cruelty hides ; 
If there the good seek for the wretched, 

And lessen their woes, 
Surely they are led on by the angels. 

And you are of those. 

In the holds of oppression, where captives 

Sit silent and weep, 
Your face as the face of a seraph 

Has shined on their sleep : 
And your white hand away from the dungeon 

His free step has led, 
AYhen the slave slipped his feet from the fetters. 

And the man rose instead ; 
Free, at least in his dreams and his visions, 



244 MY FRIEND. 

That one to behold, 
Who walked through the billows of fire 

With the faithful of old. 
And what are the walls of the prison, 

The rack and the rod, 
To him, who in thought and in spirit, 

Bows only to God ? 
If his doors are swung back by the angels, 

That visit his sleep — 
If his singing ascend at the midnight, 

Triumphant and deep ; 
He is freer than they who have bound him, 

For his spirit may rise 
And as far as infinity reaches 

May travel the skies ! 

And who knows but the wide world of slumber 

Is real as it seems ? 
God giveth them sleep. His beloved, 

And in sleep giveth dreams ! 
And happy are we if such visions 

Our souls can receive ; 
If we sleep at the gateway of heaven. 

And wake and believe. 
If angels for us on that ladder 

Ascend and descend. 
Whose top reaches into the heavens, 

With God at the end ! 
If our souls can raise up for a Bethel 



MY FRIEND, 245 

E'en the great stone that lies 
At the mouth of the sepulchre, hiding 

Our dead from our eyes ! 
But alas ! if our sight be withholden, 

If faithless, bereft. 
We stoop down, looking in at the grave-clothes 

The Risen hath left ; 
And see not the face of the angel 

All dazzling and white. 
Who points us away from the darkness, 

And up to the light ! 
And alas ! when our Helper is passing, 

,If then we delay. 
To cast off the hindering garments 

And follow his way ! 

Yet how blindly humanity gropeth, 

While clad in this veil ; 
When we seek for the truths that are nearest, 

How often we fail. 
How little we learn of each other, 

How little we teach ; 
How poorly the wisest interpret 

The look and the speech ! 
Only that which in nearest communion 

We give and receive, 
That which spirit to spirit imparteth, 

Can we know and believe. 



246 



MY FRIEND. 



Thus I know that you live, live forever, 

Free from death, free from harms ; 
For in dreams of the night, and at noonday 

Have you been in my arms ! 
And I know that, when I shall be like you, 

We shall meet face to face ; 
That all souls, who are joined by affection, 

Are joined by God's grace ; 
And that, oh my dearly beloved, 

But the Father above, 
Who made us and joined us can part us ; 

And He cannot for love ! 




RECONCILED. 

O YEARS, gone down into the past ; 

What pleasant memories come to me, 
Of your untroubled days of peace, 

And hours almost of ecstasy ! 

Yet would I have no moon stand still, 
Where life's most pleasant valleys lie ; 

Nor wheel the planet of the day 

Back on his pathway through the sky. 

For though, when youthful pleasures died, 
My youth itself went with them, too ; 

To-day, ay ! even this very hour. 
Is the best time I ever knew. 

Not that my Father gives to me 

More blessings than in days gone by ; 

Dropping in my uplifted hands 

All things for which I blindly cry : 

But that his plans and purposes 

Have grown to me less strange and dim ; 
And where I cannot understand, 

I trust the issues unto Him. 



248 RECONCILED. 

And, spite of many broken dreams, 
This have I truly learned to say, — 

The prayers I thought unanswered once, 
Were answered in God's own best way. 

And though some dearly cherished hopes 
Perished untimely ere their birth, 

Yet have I been beloved and blessed 
Beyond the measure of my worth. 

And sometimes in my hours of grief, 
For moments I have come to stand 

Where in the sorrows on me- laid, 
I felt a loving Father's hand. 

And I have learned, the weakest ones 
Are kept securest from life's harms ; 

And that the tender lambs alone 
Are carried in the shepherd's arms. 

And, sitting by the way-side blind. 
He is the nearest to the light, 

Wlio crieth out most earnestly, 

" Lord, that I might receive my sight ! " 

O feet, grown weary as ye walk. 

Where down life's hill my pathway lies, 

Wliat care I, while my soul can mount. 
As the young eagle mounts the skies ! 



RECONCILED. 249 

O eyes, with weeping faded out, 
What matters it how dim ye be ? 

My inner vision sweeps untired 
The reaches of eternity ! 

O death, most dreaded power of all, 

When the last moment comes, and thou 

Darkenest the windows of my soul, 

Through which I look on Nature now^ ; 

Yea, when mortality dissolves. 

Shall I not meet thine hour unawed? 

My house eternal in the heavens 
Is lighted by the smile of God ! 




LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 

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